The Bonanza and the twin Bonanza.What airplane has both single and twin-engine versions? It's a light plane, like a Bonanza or something. Or maybe I've dreamed this up.
The Bonanza and Twin Bonanza share little or no parts. You're probably thinking of the Bonanza and Baron.The Bonanza and the twin Bonanza.
The Navion and the Twin Navion
The Arrow and Seminole
All of these share a Fuselage
(In addition to the Comanche and the Twin Comanche)
The Bonanza and Twin Bonanza share little or no parts. You're probably thinking of the Bonanza and Baron.
All the twin Navions were conversions.
I could've sworn my mechanic was working on a twin a couple years ago and he had told me it was developed from a single engine version, but he couldn't remember what it was. I pestered him with some of the info from this post, and he did say Lance & Seneca, and you verified it. Phew!Lance/Saratoga/Cherokee 6 and the Seneca, or at least they are very similar fuselage.
Also the Bonanza and the Baron. The twin Bonanza is a different beast, closer to a King Air than a Bonanza.
Trivia: The Aerostar was originally designed to be a complete line of airplanes, from a light four-seat single to a jet. Here's a mockup of the light single.
View attachment 122613
And from the sublime to the ridiculous ... at one time Piper was messing with sketches of a proposed twin-engine Tomahawk!
Grumman Tiger and Cougar.
Someone stuck a tpe-331 on the nose of one... Speedstar 850Trivia: The Aerostar was originally designed to be a complete line of airplanes, from a light four-seat single to a jet. Here's a mockup of the light single.
View attachment 122613
And from the sublime to the ridiculous ... at one time Piper was messing with sketches of a proposed twin-engine Tomahawk!
The Mooney tail is the same way.The Aerostar is awesome. I had one for a few years and loved the plane. But it has some very interesting concepts which have never really been applied to other planes. The three tail feathers are the same exact part. The elevators on each tail feather are the same part number, they are just flipped over. The majority of the cabin body uses the same parts all the way through it....
Ted Smith has a major focus on reducing the number of unique parts in the plane. Which was supposed to make it easier to build, and to manage the logistics. I am curious if anyone has done any analysis on if this actually helped/hurt or mattered.
Tim
Don't forget the:The Eurocopter AS350 Écureuil (or Squirrel)
No it isn'tThe Mooney tail is the same way.