Beechcraft Model 17 Staggerwing
The Beechcraft Model 17 Staggerwing is an American biplane with an atypical negative wing stagger. It first flew in 1932.
Development
At the height of the Great Depression, aircraft executive Walter H. Beech and airplane designer Ted A. Wells joined forces to collaborate on a project to produce a large, powerful, and fast cabin biplane built specifically for the business executive. The Beechcraft Model 17, popularly known as the "Staggerwing", was first flown on November 4, 1932. During its heyday, it was used as an executive aircraft, much as the private jet is now, and its primary competition were the Waco Custom Cabin and Waco Standard Cabin series of biplanes.The Model 17's unusual negative stagger wing configuration and unique shape maximized pilot visibility and was intended to reduce interference drag between the wings. The fabric-covered fuselage was faired with wood formers and stringers over a welded, steel tube frame. Construction was complex and took many man-hours to complete. The Staggerwing's retractable conventional landing gear, uncommon at that time, combined with careful streamlining, light weight, and a powerful radial engine, helped it perform well.
In the mid-1930s, Beech undertook a major redesign of the aircraft, to create the Model D17 Staggerwing. The D17 featured a lengthened fuselage that improved the aircraft's handling characteristics by increasing control leverage, and the ailerons were relocated to the upper wings, eliminating interference with the flaps. Braking was improved with a foot-operated brake linked to the rudder pedals.
Between April 1936 through May 1940 there were six Model 17 fatal accidents involving midair breakups that were attributed to weather conditions and structural failures, later determined to be caused by flutter of the ailerons and wings. The CAA Bureau of Safety Regulation initially issued an edict to restrict maximum airspeed and instrument flight, which was later replaced by a safety bulletin requiring lead balance weights to be added to the ailerons and flaps, and plywood panels to the outboard portion of the wings to increase torsional stiffness of the wing tip section.
Operational history
Sales began slowly. The first Staggerwings' high price tag scared off potential buyers in an already depressed civil aircraft market. Only 18 Model 17s were sold during 1933, the first year of production, but sales steadily increased. Each Staggerwing was custom-built by hand. The luxurious cabin, trimmed in leather and mohair, held up to five passengers. Eventually, the Staggerwing captured a substantial share of the passenger aircraft market. By the start of World War II, Beechcraft had sold more than 424 Model 17s.Air racing
The Staggerwing's speed made it popular with 1930s air racers. An early version of the Model 17 won the 1933 Texaco Trophy Race. In 1935, a British diplomat, Capt. H.L. Farquhar, successfully flew around the world in a Model B17R, traveling 21,332 miles from New York to London, by way of Siberia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, North Africa and back across Europe.Louise Thaden and Blanche Noyes won the 1936 Bendix trophy in a Model C17R Staggerwing. Thaden also won the Harmon Trophy for her achievement. Jackie Cochran set a women's speed record of, established an altitude record of over 30,000 feet, and finished third in the 1937 Bendix Trophy Race, all in a special Model D17W Staggerwing. The aircraft made an impressive showing in the 1938 Bendix race, as well.
In 1970, due to a dispute with the T-6 racing class, the Reno National Air Races invited five Staggerwings to perform a demonstration race. Two G models and two D17 models raced. The five pilots were Bryant Morris, Bert Jensen, Don Clark, Noel Gourselle, and Phil Livingston, the only pilot to have prior racing experience in the T-6 class. The race was flawless with ABC Wide World of Sports coverage, but protesting T-6 racers prevented the class from future competition with allegations of safety issues.
World War II
As World War II loomed, a number of Model B17Ls were pressed into service as bombers by the FARE, the air forces of the Second Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War. China ordered a number of Staggerwings to use as ambulance planes in its fight against Imperial Japan. Finland had one C17L as a liaison aircraft between 1940–1945. On October 2, 1941, Beech shipped a special camouflaged D17S to Prince Bernhard of Lippe, who was in exile in London after the German invasion of the Netherlands. He used it for refugee work in and around London.The Beech UC-43 Traveler was a slightly modified version of the Staggerwing. In late 1938, the United States Army Air Corps purchased three Model D17Ss to evaluate them for use as light liaison aircraft. These were designated YC-43. After a short flight test program, the YC-43s went to Europe to serve as liaison aircraft with the air attachés in London, Paris, and Rome.
Early in World War II, the need for a compact executive-type transport or courier aircraft became apparent, and in 1942, the United States Army Air Forces ordered the first of 270 Model 17s for service within the United States and overseas as the UC-43. These differed only in minor details from the commercial model. To meet urgent wartime needs, the government also purchased or leased additional "Staggerwings" from private owners, including 118 more for the Army Air Force plus others for the United States Navy. In Navy service, the planes were designated as GB-1 and GB-2. The British Royal Air Force and Royal Navy acquired 106 "Traveller Mk. I" through the Lend-Lease arrangement to fill its own critical need for light personnel transports.
The production UC-43 differed in minor details from the service test YC-43. Two distinguishing external features of the UC-43 are the circular automatic direction finder antennae mounted between the main landing gear and landing lights near the lower wingtips. They were all powered by the 450 horsepower Pratt & Whitney R-985 engine.
Postwar
After the war's end, Beech immediately converted its manufacturing capabilities back to civil aircraft production, making one final version of the Staggerwing, the Model G17S. They built 16 aircraft, which they sold for US$29,000 apiece. Norway sold one D17S to Finland in 1949, which the Finnish Air Force used from 1950 to 1958.The lightweight V-tail Beechcraft Bonanza, a powerful four-passenger luxury aircraft, soon replaced the venerable Staggerwing in the Beech product line, at about a third of the price. The Bonanza was a smaller aircraft with fewer horsepower, but carried four people at a similar speed to the Staggerwing. Beechcraft sold the 785th and final Staggerwing in 1948 and delivered it in 1949.
Critical praise
In March 2003, Plane & Pilot magazine named the Staggerwing one of its Top Ten All-Time Favorite aircraft.In the April 2007 issue of AOPA Pilot magazine, it was reported that the Staggerwing was voted by nearly 3000 AOPA members as the Most Beautiful Airplane. "Members said it's the perfect balance between 'muscular strength and delicate grace,' and rated it highly for its 'classic lines and symmetry.'"
The November 2012 issue of Aviation History magazine ranked the Staggerwing fifth in their top 12 list of the Worlds Most Beautiful Airplanes. Stating that "Some might think 'the Stag' ungainly, backward wings and all, yet it has become the prime example of vintage beauty." and "...the aftward upper wing led to the big, steeply raked windscreen that is also a key element of what some have called an art deco classic."
Variants and design stages
;17By 1934, Beechcraft had designed and built four models. They were the 17R ; the A17F ; the A17FS ; and the B17L. All were fixed gear models with the exception of the B17L, which had a pneumatically retractable undercarriage. Of the three models, the B17L proved best suited to meet the market demands, and became the first production model.
;B17
;C17
;D17
;E17
;F17
;G17
;Tachikawa-Beechcraft C17E Light Transport
Military designations
;YC-43;UC-43 Traveler
;UC-43A
;UC-43B
;UC-43C
;UC-43D
;UC-43E
;UC-43F
;UC-43G
;UC-43H
;UC-43J
;UC-43K
;GB-1
;GB-2
;JB-1
;Traveller I
Engine selection
Operators
Military
Numbers operated from- Royal Australian Air Force
- Bolivian Air Force
- NAB – Navegação Aérea Brasileira
- Brazilian Air Force
- Brazilian Navy
- Chinese Nationalist Air Force
- Nanjing air force
- Cuban Army Aviation Corps
- Ethiopian Government
- Finnish Air Force
- Honduran Air Force
- Netherlands Naval Aviation Service
- Royal New Zealand Air Force
- *No. 42 Squadron RNZAF
- Peruvian Air Force five from 1946 to 1958
- Spanish Republican Air Force
- Royal Air Force
- Royal Navy
- US Army Air Corps
- US Army Air Force
- United States Navy
- Civil Air Patrol
- Uruguayan Air Force
Aircraft on display
- 6691 – D17S on static display at the Museu Aeroespacial in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
- 1 – 17R on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee. This airframe is the prototype Model 17.
- 21 – B17L on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- 93 – C17L on static display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. It was built as a C17B and originally owned by Buzz Aldrin's father.
- 100 – C17B on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- 231 – E17B on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- 257 – F17D on display at the Mid-America Air Museum in Liberal, Kansas.
- 305 – D17A on static display at the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon. This airframe was impressed into service during World War II as UC-43F 42-49071.
- 333 – F17D on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- 395 – D17S on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- 2012 - D17S on display inside at the Clarksville Regional Airport and Jet Center at Clarksville, Tennessee.
- 4835 – D17S on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- 4890 – UC-43 on display at the Yanks Air Museum in Chino, California. It has the USAAF serial number 43-10842. It was the museum's first aircraft and bears the seal of the U.S. Ambassador to London.
- 6700 – GB-2 on static display at the National Naval Aviation Museum at Naval Air Station Pensacola near Pensacola, Florida. It has the US Navy Bureau Number 23688.
- 6880 – UC-43 on display at the Fantasy of Flight in Polk City, Florida.
- 6897 – D17S on display at the Lone Star Flight Museum in Houston, Texas. Registration N666TX.
- 6913 – GB-2 on static display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio. It is painted as UC-43 39-139.
- B-3 – G17S on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
- B-7 – G17S on display at the Beechcraft Heritage Museum in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
Surviving aircraft
;Canada
- 403 – D17S in storage at the Reynolds-Alberta Museum in Wetaskiwin, Alberta.
- 4874 – D17S airworthy with Mark Hyderman of Edmonton, Alberta. It was previously owned by Vintage Wings of Canada in Gatineau, Quebec.
- 4803 – D17S airworthy at Old Buckenham Airport in Norwich, Norfolk.
- 6701 – D17S airworthy at The Fighter Collection in Duxford, Cambridgeshire. It was built in 1943 as a US Navy model GB-2. It was shipped to the UK and flown by Royal Navy's 782 Naval Air Squadron as Traveller Mk.I FT475. Postwar, it was returned to the US and flown by the US Air Force before passing into private hands. It came back to the UK in 1990 and has since flown with several owners under the UK registration G-BRVE.
- 102/110 – C17B airworthy with Christine M. St. Onge of Wexford, Pennsylvania. It is operated out of Grove City Airport in Grove City, Pennsylvania. The aircraft is painted in the colors and scheme used by Blanche Noyes and Louise Thaden for the 1936 Bendix Air Race.
- 198 – UC-43D airworthy at the Frontiers of Flight Museum in Dallas, Texas.
- 3098 – D17S airworthy at the Legacy Flight Museum in Rexburg, Idaho.
- 6704 – UC-43 airworthy at the National Warplane Museum in Geneseo, New York.
- 6914 – D17S airworthy at the Historic Flight Foundation in Mukilteo, Washington.
- TBD – TBD airworthy at the Museum of Flying in Santa Monica, California.
Specifications (Beech Model D17S)