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Beechcraft Bonanza

BE33 (N567M) at Cambridge Bay Airport, Nunavut, Canada

The Beechcraft Bonanza is one of the most important civil aircraft in aviation history. Introduced in 1947 by The Beech Aircraft Corporation, as of 2006 it is still being produced by the Beechcraft Division of Raytheon Aircraft. More than 17,000 Bonanzas have been built.

Development

Designed by a team led by Ralph Harmon, the original model 35 Bonanza was the first truly modern high-performance personal aircraft: a very fast, all-metal, low-wing monoplane at a time when most light aircraft were still made of wood and fabric. The model 35 featured retractable landing gear and its signature V-tail, which made it both highly efficient and the most distinctive private aircraft in the sky. The prototype 35 Bonanza made its first flight on December 22, 1945, with the first production aircraft debuting as 1947 models.

At the end of World War II two all-metal aircraft emerged, the 35 Bonanza and the Cessna 195, that represented very different approaches to the premium-end of the postwar civil aviation market. With its high wing, seven cylinder radial engine and fixed undercarriage, the Cessna 195 was little more than a continuation of prewar technology; the 35 Bonanza, however, was more like the great fighters developed during the war. Featuring a more powerful and easier to manage horizontally-opposed six cylinder engine, a rakishly streamlined shape, retractable undercarriage and low-wing configuration, the Bonanza captured the public's imagination, as well as the premium light plane market. The Cessna was unable to compete with the more advanced Bonanza (although it was the progenitor of the highly successful Cessna 172 and its variants, which dominated the lower end of the light plane market for decades).

Over time, Beech's implementation of the V-tail proved to have design flaws causing weakness under extreme load. Accident analysis showed the V-tail Bonanza had a fatal in-flight failure rate 24 times that of the conventional-tail variant, the model 33 Debonair (called the 33 Bonanza after 1967). In 1982 the V-tail Bonanza was dropped from production, though more than 6,000 V-tail models are still flying today. All were either built with a larger, strengthened tail, or are subject to a FAA Airworthiness Directive that requires reinforcement and ongoing inspections of the tail structure.

The straight-tail model 33 continued in production until 1995. Still built today is the model 36 Bonanza, a longer-bodied, straight-tail variant of the original design, introduced in 1968. As of 2006, a new 36 Bonanza costs nearly $700,000, considerably more than newer competitors such as the Cirrus SR22. Nevertheless, new Bonanzas remain very popular among those who can afford them, while older models command very high resale value.

All Bonanzas share an unusual feature: the rudder pedals and the ailerons are loosely interconnected with bungees. This system reduces the physical effort required to maintain coordinated flight in turns. This feature started with the V-tail and persists on the current production model, the G36[1].

Note that the twin-engine variant of the Bonanza is called the Baron, whereas the Twin Bonanza is a completely different design not based on the original single-engine Bonanza.

Variants

Model 33 Debonair/Bonanza (BE33)

* 35-33 (1960)
* 35-A33 (1961)
* 35-B33 (1962-1964)
* 35-C33 (1965-1967)
* 35-C33A (1966-1967)
* E33 (1968-1969)
* E33A (1968)
* E33C (1968-1969)
* F33 (1970)
* F33A (1970-1994)
* F33C (1970)
* G33 (1972-1980)

Model 35 Bonanza (BE35)

* 35 (1947-1948)
* A35 (1949)
* B35 (1950)
* C35 (1951-1952)
* D35 (1953)
* E35 (1954)
* F35 (1955)
* G35 (1956)
* H35 (1957)
* J35 (1958)
* K35 (1959)
* M35 (1960)
* N35 (1961)
* P35 (1962-1963)
* S35 (1964-1965)
* V35 (1966-1967)
** V35 TC (1966-1967) - turbocharged engine
** V35A (1968-1969)
** V35A TC (1968-1969) - turbocharged engine
** V35B (1970-1982)
** V35B TC (1970) - turbocharged engine

Model 36 Bonanza (BE36)

Still in production as of 2006.
* 36 (1968-1969)
* A36 (1970-2005)
* A36TC (1979-1981) - turbocharged engine
* B36TC (1982-2002) - turbocharged engine and extended wing
* G36 (2006-present) - glass cockpit update of the A36 with the Garmin G1000 system
* UA-22A
* QU-22B

Popular culture

*A Beechcraft 35 Bonanza was the aircraft Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper died in when the aircraft crashed in the middle of a snowstorm (see The Day the Music Died).
*On 7 February 1981, Apple Computer co-founder Steve Wozniak crashed his V-tail Bonanza on takeoff from Santa Cruz Sky Park.
*On March 31, 1984, Robert J. Moriarty flew the Beechcraft V-35 Bonanza, N111MS, owned by Mike Smith of Mike Smith Speed Conversions in Johnson, Kansas, through the arches under the Eiffel Tower in Paris. [2]
*On March 13, 2006, Game Show host Peter Tomarken used his Bonanza A36 to pick up a person who needed treatment at the UCLA Medical Center when his plane suddenly crashed into the Santa Monica Bay. He and his wife were killed in the crash.

Military Operators

* Argentina, Brazil, Haiti, Iran, Ivory Coast, Mexico, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Spain, United States

Specifications (1953 model D35)



crew=1capacity=3 passengerslength main=25 ft 2 inlength alt=7.67 mspan main=32 ft 10 inspan alt=10.01 mheight main=14 ft 6 inheight alt=4.42 marea main=178 ft²area alt=16.5 m²empty weight main=1,675 lbempty weight alt=760 kgloaded weight main=loaded weight alt=max takeoff weight main=2,725 lbmax takeoff weight alt=1,236 kg* Zero-lift drag coefficient: 0.0192
* Drag area: 3.48 ft² (0.32 m²)
* Aspect ratio: 6.20>engine (prop)=
type of prop=Continental E-185-11number of props=1power main=205 hp max speed main=191 mphmax speed alt=166 knots, 306 km/hstall speed main=63 mphstall speed alt=55 knots, 101 km/hrange main=779 mirange alt=677 nm, 1,247 kmceiling main=ceiling alt=climb rate main=1,100 ft/minclimb rate alt=5.6 m/sloading main=loading alt=power/mass main=power/mass alt=more performance=
* Lift-to-drag ratio: 13.8

References

External links

* American Bonanza Society
* History of the V-tail safety issue

Related content

{{aircontent|sequence=
*Beechcraft: 25 - 26 - 28 - 33 - 34 - 35 - 36 - 38 - 45 - 50
*U.S. Military: U-19 - U-20 - U-21 - U-22 - U-23 - U-24 - U-25|related=
*Bay Super V Bonanza
*Beechcraft Travel Air
*Beechcraft Baron
*IAI Paratsu
*T-34 Mentor|similar aircraft=
*Messerschmitt Bf 108
*Mooney M20
*Piper Comanche |lists=
* List of military aircraft of the United States
* List of utility aircraft|see also=



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