This site will look much better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device.

BA stock price 76.63 [- 0.99] at 4:07 PM ET on Aug 21
The Boeing Company logo
Corporate Governance | Employment | Employee/Retiree | Ethics | Suppliers | Secure Logon
Select Country/LanguageGlobe image to select country/languageGlobe, Boeing Worldlwide
Boeing Unveils the Future at Paris Air Show
Sonic Cruiser model (Neg#: K61465)
Click image to view Photo Release.
These images are available for editorial use by news media on: boeingmedia.com
NOTE: BCA photo release images are available on boeingmedia for 12 months from their release date.

Video: Sonic Cruiser - Paris Unveiling

Choose your bandwidth:
Low | High

PARIS, June 19, 2001 -- The Boeing Company today unveiled a large, detailed model of its newest commercial airplane, the sonic cruiser, at the Paris Air Show. The unveiling, by Boeing Commercial Airplanes President and Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally, concluded a program that also featured noted futurist and author John Naisbitt.

"This airplane is advanced technology's latest and best answer to the question 'how do people want to fly?' This is the airplane our customers have asked us to concentrate on," Mulally said. "They share our view that this new airplane will change the way the world flies as dramatically as did the introduction of the jet age."

The sonic cruiser is expected to fly at speeds of up to Mach .98 (98 percent of the speed of sound) or faster over extended ranges. The faster speeds will reduce flight times by approximately 20 percent, shortening air travel trips by about one-hour for every 3,000 miles flown. The airplane's long-range potential of 9,000 nautical miles (16,670 kilometers) or higher means passengers will be able to fly directly to their destinations, avoiding congested hubs and the delay and inconvenience of intermediate stops.

The model, a 1/40-scale replica 6 feet in length, reveals a sleek, innovative design that includes a large wing placed farther back on the fuselage than today's jetliner designs, and a pair of canards -- small, wing-like extensions -- near the nose of the airplane. Two engines are placed at the rear of the airplane.

Naisbitt, the author of the best-selling Megatrends and, most recently, High Tech/ High Touch, introduced Mulally with remarks about how key trends are reshaping the world, including air travel and travelers' expectations and habits. Naisbett commented on the trends of instant and direct connectivity, a world "menu" of cultural choices available as part of daily life, and an "experience economy" in which people increasingly transcend temporal, spatial and financial limits to do the things that interest them, enabled by new technologies and new ways of thinking.

"We are moving into the Internet world, and that world is about bringing people together," Naisbitt said. He described technological breakthroughs like the sonic cruiser as enablers of connectivity, an assessment with which Mulally agreed.

"Air travel is about bringing people together," Mulally said. "That's what it comes down to. And the sonic cruiser will help us take air travel and bringing people together to a new level."

The Paris Air Show, historically a prime showcase for Boeing and other aerospace manufacturers, continues through June 24.

###
Contact Info:
Russ Young
Paris
+33 1 41 57 52 85
Mike Wiegand
Seattle
206-766-2912