Save the Mentor!
T-34 owners are the latest to prove the value of good old-fashioned American ingenuity.
- By Peter Garrison
- Air & Space magazine, January 2005
he mock dogfight, on April 19, 1999, began with the airplanes outside each other's visual range. When the pilots caught sight of each other- both flying Beech T-34 Mentors in gray and blue U.S. Air Force camouflage paint, with "SW" in big black letters on their tails-the one at "perch" (the higher altitude) began a descending turn to intercept the aircraft below it.
In the rear seat of the attacking airplane was Dan Bouck, 51, of Atlanta, an airline pilot with 15,500 hours of flight time. Bouck, the safety pilot, had been flying for the Sky Warriors civilian aerial combat school for two years and had logged 450 hours in the T-34. In the front seat was the customer, another professional pilot, Ted McFann Sr., 60, who had retired from the airlines with some 25,000 hours.
T-34 Aerobatics (Leslie Hicks)
Bouck urged McFann not to be shy as he closed on the other airplane. "Roll all the way through-harder, harder! All the way through! That's it, that's right. Bury your nose, bring it down. That's it, good! Now don't chase him into the ground."
Without warning, as the T-34 made a tight left turn, its right wing separated near the fuselage. The aircraft whirled out of control. Both pilots were wearing parachutes, but as the wing failed it swung over and crushed the canopy. Both men died in the crash, which also destroyed a half-century of confidence in the structural integrity of the T-34.
The T-34 Mentor is a military trainer version of Beech's tremendously successful Bonanza, the V-tail four-seat airplane that came onto the market in 1947. For the trainer, Beech replaced the Bonanza's cabin and upper fuselage with a greenhouse-style canopy, similar to that on the World War II North American T-6 Texan trainer. Tandem seating put the student in front, instructor behind. The original engine was a six-cylinder, 225-horsepower Continental O-470. A conventional three-surface empennage replaced the Bonanza's trademark V tail, which had been intended to produce less drag but never quite provided solid yaw stability.
Bonanza (Jim Koepnick/EAA)
The Bonanza had originally been certified in the "utility" category, with a load limit of 4.4 Gs. Airplanes used for aerobatics-and those used by military pilots-must be sturdier. Their structures must be able to withstand plus 6 and minus 3 Gs without permanent deformation. They must withstand 9 Gs or minus 4.5 Gs without breaking, though the structure may be permanently bent. These are the limits the Mentor was certified to withstand. (With minor reinforcments, the Bonanza also proved capable of handling the higher aerobatic loads.)
The U.S. Air Force bought 348 T-34As, with deliveries beginning in 1953. A year later the Navy ordered a slightly modified version, the T-34B; Beech eventually delivered 423. A few foreign air forces also bought the airplane, and some were assembled under license in Japan, Canada, and Argentina. Production of the piston-engine versions ended in 1959, but Beech delivered 441 copies of a turbine version, the T-34C (or "Charlie"), to the Navy between 1976 and 1990. The 300-mph Charlie, powered by a 400-horsepower Pratt & Whitney turboprop, is 1,000 pounds heavier than the A and B models, and uses a stronger main wing spar, adapted from Beech's twin-engine Duke.
Mentors began to filter into the civil registry during the 1970s as the Air Force and Navy released airplanes to the Civil Air Patrol, foreign air forces started to retire them, and enterprising shops began assembling airplanes out of scrapped parts. (Charlies have not yet trickled down into civil hands, though many T-34 aficionados would sacrifice minor body parts or close relatives to get one.) Owners often paint them in military camouflage or in fanciful schemes mingling inspirations from several military liveries. Many T-34s have received newer, more powerful engines of 260 or 285 hp.
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Comments (2)
I put many hours on T-34 15MC and 75MC at Quantico virginia decades ago. They were fun airplanes in every respect. Docile, maneuverable, and easy to land and fly. I am happy to see a few are still flying.
Posted by Tom on December 28,2008 | 06:40 PM
In 1977, I was in charge to prepare 25 T34B that were in DMAFB Tucson Az. to send to Uruguay. After the mission was acomplished, I was in charge to prepare and supervise the overhaul of these 25 airplanes and (of course), to fly the flight-test of every one of them.
The FAU (Uruguayan Air Force or Fuerza Aerea Uruguaya) bought 1 T34A in USA to Mentor Aviation, plus another 4 in Miami,plus another 25 in DMAFB, 5 more in Chile and another 18 in Spain
About the T34B, I flew many hours in this plane (part of more than 7000 that I flew in FAU), and this plane, like the Texan T6 and the incredible C47, are planes that I will never forget.
Thanks for let me remember the T34
Bets regards
Col.(FAU) Walter J. Dopazo
Posted by Col. (FAU) Walter J. Dopazo on September 17,2010 | 11:45 PM