After technical problems with the Comet, BOAC resumed jet service with imported Boeing 707s.
The Vickers VC-10 was developed for BOAC. Many of the airline's requirements for operability from hot and high airfields made the VC-10 unsuitable for North American carriers.
In May 1952, BOAC became the first airline to use a passenger jet, the De Havilland Comet. All Comet I's were grounded in April 1954 after three BOAC Comets crashed. Investigators discovered serious cracks in the planes' structures. The cracks were caused by metal fatigue due the repeated pressurization and depressurization of airplanes as they ascended and descended. De Havilland engineers then designed an improved Comet, which was called the Series 4. In 1958, BOAC used the new Comets to become the first airline to fly jet passenger services across the Atlantic.
BOAC also operated the Vickers VC-10 and Boeing 747, and would have become one of the first operators of the Concorde had it not merged to become British Airways (one of BA's Concordes carried the registration G-BOAC).
The British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) was the exclusive British state airline from 1939 until 1946 and the long-haul British state airline from 1946 until it merged with British European Airways in 1974.
All Comet Is were grounded in April 1954 after three BOAC Comets exploded in the air.