Beechcraft Bonanza V35B

Piston single engine • Low Wing • Retractable gear

Range Map

Origin:

nm at current load

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Payload vs. Range

Configure weights

Default: 190 lbs

Default: 30 lbs

Occupants
lbs lbs / pax

gal

Fuel on board

lbs

Extra weight

nm

Range

Available Range / nm
Mission capable. Aircraft can handle the current load with full fuel tanks.
Fuel tradeoff required. You'll need to leave gallons of fuel behind ( gal usable for nm range).
Over max gross weight. Reduce payload by lbs to safely operate this aircraft.
Extra weight is the additional payload available with your selected passengers.

Mission Profile

Endorsements & ratings:
  • High-Performance
  • Complex
172
KTAS
Cruise Speed
824
nm
Max Range
17500
ft
Service Ceiling
6
Occupants
850
lbs
Wet Payload
Used market Only available used

Estimated Ownership Costs

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About the Beechcraft Bonanza V35B

Type certificated 1969

Overview

The Beechcraft V35B Bonanza is the final and most refined iteration of the V-tail Bonanza line, produced from 1970 to 1982. The Model 35 that preceded it first flew in 1945, making the Bonanza family the longest-running production aircraft in history at the time of the V35B’s discontinuation. That longevity is not sentiment: it reflects a design that delivered genuine performance, a wide cabin, and well-sorted handling in a package that resisted meaningful improvement for decades.

The V35B is powered by a fuel-injected Continental IO-520-BB producing 285 HP, and cruises at 172 knots, meaningfully faster than the Cessna 172 and Piper Cherokee contemporaries it competed against. The V-tail configuration reduces the total number of control surfaces and was originally intended to lower drag and weight relative to a conventional empennage. In practice the aerodynamic gains were modest, but the visual distinctiveness became a defining characteristic of the model. Production ended in 1982 when Beechcraft consolidated the line around the straight-tail A36, which offered a third row of seats and a larger cabin door. Choose the V35B when you want the original V-tail Bonanza’s speed, ramp presence, and four-place efficiency, and you accept ruddervator-specific maintenance and a vintage airframe as the trade.

Key Features for GA Buyers

  • Speed. At 172 knots, the V35B is among the faster naturally aspirated retractable-gear singles of its era. The combination of the IO-520-BB’s 285 HP and the clean airframe places it ahead of most contemporary four-seat alternatives on cruise performance.
  • Cabin width. The Bonanza’s fuselage is notably wide for a four-seat single: wider than a Mooney, wider than a Cherokee, and competitive with aircraft two weight classes above it. For passengers on longer legs, this matters.
  • Continental IO-520-BB reliability. Fuel injection eliminates the carburetor ice risk that affects many competing types, and the IO-520 family has a well-understood maintenance profile with a 1,700-hour TBO.
  • Owner community and support. The American Bonanza Society is the most active type-specific owner organization in general aviation. Technical resources, maintenance forums, and factory-trained service centers are abundant relative to most vintage types.

Trade-offs

  • Ruddervator maintenance. The V-tail’s combined rudder-elevator surfaces require precise rigging and periodic inspection. Magnesium control surface skins can be expensive to source; deferred maintenance on the ruddervators has historically contributed to structural failures and is the origin of the type’s reputation.
  • Yaw sensitivity. The V35B exhibits mild directional instability in turbulence, colloquially called the Bonanza Boogie. A factory-option yaw damper largely resolves this; buyers should confirm its presence or budget for installation.
  • Useful load vs. full fuel. 74 gallons (444 lb) of fuel against a 1,294-lb useful load leaves 850 lb for occupants and bags with full tanks. Four adults with luggage will require a fuel load compromise on longer legs.
  • Insurance and training. The type’s historical accident record, predominantly attributable to high-powered aircraft in the hands of pilots with inadequate recurrent training, raises insurance premiums relative to simpler types. The American Bonanza Society’s training programs are the standard mitigation.

See Also

  • Beech Bonanza 33 – the straight-tail contemporary: similar airframe and engine, different tail configuration, broadly considered more structurally conventional. Compare
  • Beech Bonanza G36 – the current-production Bonanza, building on the A36’s six-seat fuselage and double doors with a Garmin G1000 NXi glass cockpit; marginally faster cruise. Compare
  • Mooney M20C – the efficiency-oriented contemporary: slower cruise, narrower cabin, significantly better fuel economy. Compare
  • Piper PA-24 Comanche – the direct Piper competitor of the era: retractable gear, similar mission profile, different ownership ecosystem. Compare
  • Cessna 195 – the radial-engine taildragger contemporary: slower, more characterful, very different operational demands. Compare

Technical Specifications

Dimensions & Weights

Wingspan 33.5 ft
Height
7.6 ft
Length
26.4 ft
Parking area (ft2)
1365.9 ft2
Max Takeoff Weight
3,400 lbs
Max Landing Weight
3,400 lbs
Useful Load
1,294 lbs
Fuel Capacity
74 gal

Performance

Cruise Speed
172 KTAS
Never-Exceed (VNE)
Source: FAA Type Certificate Data Sheet 197 KIAS
Max Structural Cruise (VNO)
Source: FAA Type Certificate Data Sheet 167 KIAS
Approach Speed
75 KIAS
Stall, Clean (VS1)
64 KIAS
Range
824 NM
Service Ceiling
17,500 ft
Rate of Climb
1136 fpm
Takeoff over 50 ft obstacle
1,769 ft
Landing ground roll
647 ft

Engine

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Sources

Where the figures on this page come from. Beechcraft Bonanza V35B specifications are traced to published references; estimated values are flagged inline next to the figure.

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