Lowflynjack
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Jack Fleetwood
I shot this beautiful E33 last year at Oshkosh. My photos and story by Budd Davisson are in the April edition of Sport Aviation magazine.
Yep. Looks like a VOR/LOC/GS antenna.What is that sticking out just over the "N"? Nav antenna?
Nothing is sexier than a short body Bonanza. Don't @ me
Thank you!Jack:
You have skills.
Yep. Looks like a VOR/LOC/GS antenna.
Looks like there are three (! ??) GPS antennas on top, between the two comm antennas...
Maybe a dedicated GPS for the ELT?Looks like there are three (! ??) GPS antennas on top, between the two comm antennas...
LOL, I logged on and thought, wow, this thread got a lot of attention. Then I noticed... 13 replies... 6 are about the antennas!!
Thanks. I made sure to add that one since I liked what the barn added to it!Well, as usual your photos are splendid. I particularly liked the one with a red barn in the background.
Thank you, Stan! Always good to hear from you.Gorgeous Debonair and great photos as usual, Jack!
Oops! Mea culpa. My most humble apologies.Thank you, Stan! Always good to hear from you.
Technically it's not a Debonair. Never thought I'd know so much about these planes. The reason we did this story is because it's a rare E33 Bonanza, I think 115 or so made. Only named E33 in '68 and '69
AOPA Pilot Sept. 1998 said:In 1966, the C33A Debonair introduced the 285-hp Continental IO-520 to the straight-tail airframe. With the introduction of the E33 two years later, Beech began calling the no-longer-budget bird what everybody already knew it to be — a Bonanza, although the "poor man's" moniker hung around for several years afterward.
No apologies needed!!Oops! Mea culpa. My most humble apologies.
This one is an E33A, the 285 hp model.
Yes. The 225 hp models all had the old Bonanza nose cap with separate openings on either side of the spinner. All the 285 hp models have the single full-width opening, to accommodate the canted thrust line. Also, the 225 hp models had fixed cowl flaps.Curious, is there a way to tell the difference between the two without looking up the registration? Such as a cowl shape or something?
I looked, but can't find any factory photos of a 33 series Debonair/Bonanza with the beacon on the fin. 36 series yes, 33 no. W&B issue? Production line commonality with the 35 series?And is that a beacon on top of the fuselage instead of the vertical stabilizer?
The V35A, V35A-TC, E33 and E33A were the 1968-69 models. This ad doesn't mention the aerobatic models E33C (285 hp) and E33B (225 hp; listed in the catalog but none were ever ordered or built), which came along a little later in 1968. So this ad is probably from the new-model splash at the tail end of 1967 or early 1968.Lookee what I found on ebay. Its a two page magazine spread from the sixties, but nothing on the back of either page that gives a date or the magazine. I thought it odd that the same tail number, N8633M, is used for both the V35A and the V35A TC with different paint schemes.
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Wow, Jeff, I had no idea. Seriously. Thanks for the education.The V35A, V35A-TC, E33 and E33A were the 1968-69 models. This ad doesn't mention the aerobatic models E33C (285 hp) and E33B (225 hp; listed in the catalog but none were ever ordered or built), which came along a little later in 1968. So this ad is probably from the new-model splash at the tail end of 1967 or early 1968.
Manufacturers had to get the print ads to the magazines and brochures out to their dealers well in advance of the airplanes being ready. Thus they would often photograph last year's model with a new paint job and put it in the next year's ads and brochures. In this case Beech evidently used the same airplane - N8633M - to double as both the V35A and V35A-TC.
Piper would often pull one of the previous year's models off the line, repaint it and add exterior modifications as necessary, and show it as next year's model. In the early 1990s I put about about 150 rental hours on this Turbo Arrow, by serial number a 1983 model but painted in the 1984 scheme:
For their ads Cessna often would doll up their tired, oft-modified engineering prototype mules. An example was N34266, which was painted in turn as the 1962 base 182, the '62 Skylane, the '63 Skylane, and with redesigned cabin windows, the '64 Skylane.
The 1978 Grumman-American Tiger? Not a Tiger at all; it's a Cheetah with Tiger paint and logos.
Sales brochure photos are not always reliable guides for spotting a particular year or model.
Back in 1963-64 one might be forgiven for wondering if every Cessna 172 in the world were registered N5414E ...Wow, Jeff, I had no idea. Seriously. Thanks for the education.
Ha! Here's my '63 172D after my 2002 repaint.Back in 1963-64 one might be forgiven for wondering if every Cessna 172 in the world were registered N5414E ...
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Too bad there isn't an airplane quiz show, @Pilawt would easily win, there's no competition that could beat him.