I've Been Away: Duxford 2
Years ago, I had a madcap notion to watch a production of Cats in London, then hop on a cross-Atlantic Concorde, have dinner in New York and afterward attend the Broadway version of Cats – all in the same evening. It was quite do-able, and I think someone wrote about the experience.
Sadly I never did manage to fly Concorde, but our paths crossed several times, and I regretted not making the effort.
So finding the #2 prototype hangered at Duxford was something of an answer to a bucket list item I didn’t know I had, really.
It is the most beautiful thing, certainly. And an astonishing bit of kit for its time as we know.
This one carries full test instrumentation which is in its own right, astonishing, and all analogue.
There’s a workstation devoted to measuring the temperature of the wing root for example.
And everything else that might have been a cause of some worry to the engineers of the time.
Which means: everything. Nobody had made one of these.

https://youtu.be/naoaeBvnu_A
https://youtu.be/FhZZ3cBIUiU
Bloody noisy thing thanks to those monster Olympus engines.
Parked carefully under the port wing is the original owner of those motors, the TSR2. This is what I really came to see.

They are clearly of the same design zeitgeist, these two. And even today look like the fastest thing you can imagine flying. Especially when compared to the Vulcan next door.

It’s much smaller than I had thought - close to the Lancaster in fact, which is parked on the other side. Here’s a doodle I made (thanks Wikipedia)
Same length (Lancaster in blue, Stirling in yellow):

Comparable range, around 4,000km
Bomb load at 4,500kg somewhat less than the Lanc’s 6,400kg but given they were to be a pair of 300 kiloton nukes…
And delivered at Mach 2.15 vs 245 knots!

I spent a long time gawping at this thing of beauty.
I can’t really add to the huge online resources regarding its history, here’s a sample which may be of interest.
https://youtu.be/XgqWEH0Dzrs?si=IJ-w74RH4hXH0ce9
Sadly I never did manage to fly Concorde, but our paths crossed several times, and I regretted not making the effort.
So finding the #2 prototype hangered at Duxford was something of an answer to a bucket list item I didn’t know I had, really.
It is the most beautiful thing, certainly. And an astonishing bit of kit for its time as we know.
This one carries full test instrumentation which is in its own right, astonishing, and all analogue.
There’s a workstation devoted to measuring the temperature of the wing root for example.
And everything else that might have been a cause of some worry to the engineers of the time.
Which means: everything. Nobody had made one of these.

https://youtu.be/naoaeBvnu_A
https://youtu.be/FhZZ3cBIUiU
Bloody noisy thing thanks to those monster Olympus engines.
Parked carefully under the port wing is the original owner of those motors, the TSR2. This is what I really came to see.

They are clearly of the same design zeitgeist, these two. And even today look like the fastest thing you can imagine flying. Especially when compared to the Vulcan next door.

It’s much smaller than I had thought - close to the Lancaster in fact, which is parked on the other side. Here’s a doodle I made (thanks Wikipedia)
Same length (Lancaster in blue, Stirling in yellow):

Comparable range, around 4,000km
Bomb load at 4,500kg somewhat less than the Lanc’s 6,400kg but given they were to be a pair of 300 kiloton nukes…
And delivered at Mach 2.15 vs 245 knots!

I spent a long time gawping at this thing of beauty.
I can’t really add to the huge online resources regarding its history, here’s a sample which may be of interest.
https://youtu.be/XgqWEH0Dzrs?si=IJ-w74RH4hXH0ce9
