Beechcraft Bonanza V35B
Piston single engine • Low Wing • Retractable gear
Range Map
• nm at current load
• click map to move • two fingers to move map
Payload vs. Range
Configure weights
Default: 190 lbs
Default: 30 lbs
gal
Fuel on board
lbs
Extra weight
nm
Range
Mission Profile
- High-Performance
- Complex
Estimated Ownership Costs
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
- 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
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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See how the Beechcraft Bonanza V35B stacks up against similar aircraft
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