The
Aero Experience continues our year-round coverage of EAA AirVenture Oshkosh
2019, sponsored by Elite Aviation, with a look at the classic T-34 Mentor trainer. The
T-34 was a Beechcraft private venture effort to propose a primary training
aircraft to replace the T-6 Texan in all branches of U.S. armed forces. Following World War II, Beechcraft developed
the V-tailed Model 35 Bonanza featuring tricycle landing gear in 1947. The new trainer was based on the Bonanza
heritage, but with tandem seating and single vertical tail design. From 1949-1950, Beechcraft put the YT-34 on
tour across the U.S. to gain support for the project, and it eventually won the
primary trainer contract. Subsequently,
the USAF began service with the T-34A in 1953, and U.S. Navy did the same with
its T-34B in 1955. The USAF retired its
T-34As in the 1960s, but the U.S. Navy continued to use its piston-powered
trainers until their replacement with the T-34C Turbo Mentor in 1977. The civilian designations for the former
military aircraft were A-45 (T-45A) and D-45 (T-34B). Also, T-34As (B-45) were sold to foreign countries,
and others were built in Japan, Canada and Argentina.
Several
hundred T-34s remain in civilian ownership to date, with many performing
publicly in some capacity at airshows and fly-ins across the country. When flown within performance envelope, the
classic T-34 can present a graceful aerobatic display at less cost than many
other aircraft of its era. Airshow
performers such as Julie Clark and the Lima Lima Flight Team fly the T-34 with plenty of smoke to mark the smooth turns, loops and
rolls of their aerobatic routines.
No comments:
Post a Comment