Beautifully made promotional film but also very very obviously multiple takes, drone shots, reaction shots, over the shoulder cockpit shots, out of sequence, and regrettably not nearly enough pure flight shots. It's a composite of weeks of takes.
Also, the airliner may be glass screen cockpit on screens. This one had eyeballs to the sky.
> Also, the airliner may be glass screen cockpit on screens. This one had eyeballs to the sky.
I'm not sure what you're getting at with this?
The pilot had all glass avionics here. Other than the lack of an FMS (which is just never used in small aircraft), this had everything I'd expect to see in modern systems.
But also, even in an aircraft with a glass cockpit, the pilot is supposed to be mostly eyes up. Unless you're inside inclement weather, aviation operates on the "see and avoid" principle. Especially so when you're flying low and in congested airspace like the Mojave MOAs.
Why would a couple of cameras and a screen be an insane feat of engineering? I spent a lot of time watching on the back of seat screen the tail cam and front camera of the A350 I flew on recently. One issue the Concorde had was poor visibility out of the windows which they solved by having a moveable hinged nose, cameras make this issue go away (assuming there is good redundancy)
The flight pretty much consisted of taking off, turning around and landing, it would be pretty boring if they just showed that. In particular, this didn't go even close to supersonic, this time.
Also, the airliner may be glass screen cockpit on screens. This one had eyeballs to the sky.