On this day in 1949, the world's first jet-propelled
airliner, the British De Havilland Comet, makes its maiden test-flight
in England. The jet engine would ultimately revolutionize the airline
industry, shrinking air travel time in half by enabling planes to climb
faster and fly higher.



The Comet was the creation of English
aircraft designer and aviation pioneer Sir Geoffrey de Havilland
(1882-1965). De Havilland started out designing motorcycles and buses,
but after seeing
Wilbur Wright
demonstrate an airplane in 1908, he decided to build one of his own.
The Wright brothers had made their famous first flight at Kitty Hawk,
North Carolina,
in 1903. De Havilland successfully designed and piloted his first plane
in 1910 and went on to work for English aircraft manufacturers before
starting his own company in 1920. De Havilland Aircraft Company became a
leader in the aviation industry, known for developing lighter engines
and faster, more streamlined planes.

In 1939, an experimental jet-powered plane debuted in Germany. During
World War II,
Germany was the first country to use jet fighters. De Havilland also
designed fighter planes during the war years. He was knighted for his
contributions to aviation in 1944.



Following the war, De
Havilland turned his focus to commercial jets, developing the Comet and
the Ghost jet engine. After its July 1949 test flight, the Comet
underwent three more years of testing and training flights. Then, on May
2, 1952, the British Overseas Aircraft Corporation (BOAC) began the
world's first commercial jet service with the 44-seat Comet 1A, flying
paying passengers from London to Johannesburg. The Comet was capable of
traveling 480 miles per hour, a record speed at the time. However, the
initial commercial service was short-lived, and due to a series of fatal
crashes in 1953 and 1954, the entire fleet was grounded. Investigators
eventually determined that the planes had experienced metal fatigue
resulting from the need to repeatedly pressurize and depressurize. Four
years later, De Havilland debuted an improved and recertified Comet, but
in the meantime, American airline manufacturers Boeing and Douglas had
each introduced faster, more efficient jets of their own and become the
dominant forces in the industry. By the early
1980s, most Comets used by commercial airlines had been taken out of service.
Taken from:
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/first-jet-makes-test-flight [27.07.2012]
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