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Beechcraft Twin Bonanza

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Model 50 Twin Bonanza
Supercharged 1961 J50 Twin Bonanza
Type Utility aircraft
Manufacturer Beech Aircraft Corporation
Maiden flight 15 November 1949
Introduced 1952 (US Army)
Retired 1992 (US Army)
Status Active in general aviation
Primary user Private operators
Produced 1952-1961
Number built 994
Variants L-23/U-8 Seminole
Queen Air
King Air

The Beechcraft Model 50 Twin Bonanza was a small twin-engine aircraft designed by Beechcraft as an executive transport for the business market. It was developed to fill a gap in Beechcraft's product line between the single-engine Model 35 Bonanza and the larger Model 18.[1] The Twin Bonanza is about 50% larger than the Bonanza, has more powerful engines, and is significantly heavier, while in its earliest form having only half the passenger capacity of the Model 18.

Development

The single-engine Bonanza is one of history's most successful civil aircraft, in production since 1947. Like many light aircraft, a twin-engine derivative was developed in an effort to improve performance, but this was the Model 95 Travel Air[1] (and later the Model 95-55 Baron, its descendant still in production in late 2007 as the Model G58). The Twin Bonanza is not a true twin-engined derivative of the Bonanza, however it superficially resembles the Travel Air (which was designed later).

The Twin Bonanza first flew on 15 November 1949 after a rapid development, only begun in April.[2] The Model 50's type certificate was awarded in 1952,[3] and production began the same year. The United States Army adopted the Twin Bonanza as the L-23 Seminole utility transport, making it the largest fixed-wing aircraft in the inventory at that time. During an initial demonstration flight for the Army, a Twin Bonanza crashed while trying to take off over a 50 foot tree line while full of soldiers and sandbags. Everyone on board walked away from the crash. The Army was impressed with the structural strength of the Twin Bonanza, eventually purchasing 216 of the 994 examples produced.[3] It was also the first twin-engine aircraft in its class to be offered to the business market, but the Korean War was raging in the early 1950s and the US Army took almost the entire production for 1952 and 1953.[1]

The Model 65 Queen Air and Model 90 King Air are both direct descendents of the Model 50. All three aircraft share the same basic wing design, as well as landing gear, flaps, instrument panels, fuel cells, and more. The Queen Air added a larger cabin to the design, while the later King Air added turbine power and pressurization. Twin Bonanza production ended in 1963[4] while the King Air was under development.

Variants

File:VHBRH.JPG
Beechcraft J50 Twin Bonanza
Model 50
Initial production version powered by Lycoming GO-435-C2 engines, 66 built (mostly for the US Army).
Model B50
Upgraded Model 50 with increased take-off weight, extra cabin windows and improved cabin heating, 139 built (40 for the US Army).
Model C50
Superseded the B50; fitted with 275hp Lycoming GO-480-F1A6 engines, 155 built (one to United States Air Force).
Model D50
Superseded the C50; fitted with 295hp Lycoming GO-480-G2C6 engines, 154 built (six to US Army).
Model D50A
Upgraded D50 fitted with GO-480-G2D6 engines, 44 built.
Model D50B
Upgraded D50A with new passenger steps and improved baggage area, 38 built.
Model D50C
Upgraded D50B with starboard airstair entry door, three rows of seats, improved air conditioning, larger baggage area, 64 built.
Model D50E
Upgraded D50C with extra port side window, squared-off rear starbord window, pointed nose and 295hp Lycoming GO-480-G2F6 engines, 47 built.
Model E50
Superseded the D50; with increased take-off weight and 340hp super-charged GSO-480-B1B6 engines, 181 built (mostly for the US Army).
Model F50
Superseded the D50A with GSO-480-B1B6 engines, 26 built including one converted to G50 standard.
Model G50
Superseded the D50B with 340hp IGSO-480-A1A6 engines, increased fuel capacity and increased take-off weight, one conversion from F50 plus 23 built.
Model H50
Superseded the D50C with increased take-off weight and IGSO-480-A1A6 engines, 30 built.
Model J50
Superseded the D50E with 340hp IGSO-480-A1B6 engines and increased take-off weight, 27 built.
Excalibur 800
A modification designed originally by Swearingen Aircraft and taken over by the Excalibur Aviation Company which re-engines the Twin Bonanza with two 400hp (298kW) Avco Lycoming IO-720-A1A flat-eight engines in a new cowling and revised exhaust system. Other optional improvements were also available.

Military operators

Specifications (E50)

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1-2 pilots
  • Capacity: 5 passengers
  • Length: 31 ft 6 in (9.61 m)
  • Wingspan: 45 ft 3 in (13.78 m)
  • Height: 11 ft 6 in (3.51 m)
  • Wing area: 277 ft² (25.7 m²)
  • Empty weight: 5,010 lb (2,270 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 7300 lbs (3311 kg)
  • Powerplant:Lycoming GSO-480-B1B6, 340 hp (253 kW) each

Performance


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Phillips, Edward H. Beechcraft - Pursuit of Perfection, A History of Beechcraft Airplanes. Flying Books, Eagan, Minnesota 1992. ISBN 0-911139-11-7.
  2. Beechcraft Heritage Museum Twin Bonanza page retrieved 2007-12-26.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Beechcraft. Aerofiles: A Century of American Aviation (2006-07-14). Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
  4. Twin Bonanza Model data retrieved 2007-12-26.

Twin Bonanza Association http://twinbonanza.com

See also

Related development

Comparable aircraft

Designation sequence

Related lists

de:Beechcraft Model 50 ja:ビーチ ツイン・ボナンザ


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Beechcraft Twin Bonanza".