New superb colorized images of the Convair 990 - hot rod of the skies

Geoffrey Thomas

By Geoffrey Thomas Mon Jan 22, 2024

New superb colorized images of the Convair 990 - hot rod of the skies - have been done by Frenchman Benoit Vienne. The photos epitomize the raw speed of what was the world's fastest subsonic jet built by San Diego-based Convair, a division of General Dynamics.
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A REAL "flight attendant", understood to be the model/actress Raquel Welch, christens the CV990 prototype. Colorized by Benoit Vienne.
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American CV990 taxies for take-off in a wintery scene. Colorized by Benoit Vienne.
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Convair 990 at LAX. Colorized by Benoit Vienne
Convair, pursued American Airlines’ business by guaranteeing an enhanced CV 880 would beat the competition coast-to-coast by 45 minutes. JOIN: AirlineRatings.com YouTube Channel GET: Accurate MH370 Information From AirlineRatings.com Newsletter American’s chief C.R. Smith was taken by the speed. He wanted a faster jet to “beat the pants” off Texas-based Braniff Airlines, which had ordered the domestic 707 with the bigger intercontinental engines for its flights. Braniff marketed it as “The Jet with The Big Engines”.
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Convair 990 at LAX. Colorized by Benoit Vienne
American’s plan was to use the Convair jet for the first class only “Blue Streak” service and configure American’s 707s for all economy. American purchased 25 of what was essentially a new aircraft from Convair but the aircraft’s radical changes were not made clear to the General Dynamic’s board. Problems with the aircraft, now called the CV990, surfaced almost immediately on test flights and the aircraft was unable to meet its speed and fuel burn guarantees despite a host of modifications. The Convair 990 needed to gulp fuel to reach its speed guarantee. When the production run finished with just 102 880s and 990s built, GD had written off $4.16 million per plane – more than they sold for. Any possibility of further sales of the Convair jets was dashed when Boeing announced its three-engine 727 tri-jet in 1959. Suddenly a three-engine jet would basically do the same mission as a four-engine model and be far cheaper per passenger on fuel burn.
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Convair 990 over Southern California. Colorized by Benoit Vienne

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