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Wondering about Beechcraft V-tail Baron/Two engine Bonanza?



 
 
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  #11  
Old June 7th 05, 04:13 AM
George Patterson
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Steven P. McNicoll wrote:

Oops. That should have been, "It had a conventional empennage".


Yep, but we knew what you meant.

George Patterson
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and they think irrationally when a woman wears leather clothing?
Because she smells like a new truck.
  #12  
Old June 7th 05, 04:36 AM
Orval Fairbairn
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In article t,
"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote:

"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message
.net...

The Beech model 50 Twin Bonanza was produced from 1951 to 1963. It had a
conventional fuselage. While it was called the Twin Bonanza it was not a
Bonanza with two engines.


Oops. That should have been, "It had a conventional empennage".


Actually, they took a Bonanza fuselage, split it down the middle, added
a slice, lengthened it, added a wing center section and bigger gear and
the T-Bone was born.

The only butterfly tail twin that started life as a Bonanza was the
Fleet Super V, which had a pair of Lycoming IO-360s, and came out about
1963.

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  #13  
Old June 7th 05, 05:35 PM
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It does sound like the Super V - althogh I doubt a toy manufacturer
would go to such lengths to accurately model an airplane of which only
a dozen or so were ever converted.

  #14  
Old June 7th 05, 09:36 PM
Steven P. McNicoll
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wrote in message
oups.com...

It does sound like the Super V -


It's not.


  #15  
Old June 8th 05, 01:45 AM
Ron Natalie
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Tom Fleischman wrote:


I seem to recall that there was a Twin Bonanza built at one time, but I
don't think it was a V-tail.


A T-bone doesn't look anything like the single bonanza's in any
configuration...it's more of a queen-air ancestor (huge).

There was a V-tailed Beech twin (very rare) that the OP already
ruled out.
 




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