Debonair
The Beechcraft Bonanza is an American
general aviation aircraft introduced in
1947 by The Beech Aircraft Corporation
of Wichita, Kansas. As of 2010, it is still
being produced by Hawker Beechcraft,
and has been in continuous production
longer than any other airplane in history.
More than 17,000 Bonanzas of all
variants have been built.

(1962-1964) A33 with contoured fin leading edge, N35 fuel
tank modifications and P35 instrument panel, 426 built
35-B33 Debonair
At the end of World War II, two all-metal aircraft emerged, the
Model 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,
fixed tailwheel undercarriage and roll-down side windows, the
Cessna 195 was little more than a continuation of prewar
technology; the 35 Bonanza, however, was more like the fighters
developed during the war, featuring an easier-to-manage
horizontally-opposed six cylinder engine, a rakishly streamlined
shape, retractable nosewheel undercarriage (although the
nosewheel initially was not steerable, or castering)[3] and low-
wing configuration.Designed by a team led by Ralph Harmon, the
model 35 Bonanza was a relatively fast, 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 (equipped with a combination elevator-rudder
called a ruddervator), which made it both efficient and the most
distinctive private aircraft in the sky. The prototype 35 Bonanza
made its first flight on 22 December 1945, with the first
production aircraft debuting as 1947 models. The first 30–40
Bonanzas produced had fabric-covered flaps and ailerons, after
which, those surfaces were covered with magnesium alloy sheet.
Beech 35-B33
History
Type Certificate
Data Sheet
N9742Y