Bede BD-5
In 1961, Jim Bede formed the Bede Aircraft Corporation in a successful effort to break into the homebuilt aircraft market. Pilots unable or unwilling to buy a prebuilt aircraft could purchase kits for low prices and build the aircraft themselves. Homebuilts also allowed for a lot of innovation and experimentation. Bede had scored a success with his BD-4 homebuilt, but he had a radical idea for his next design, the BD-5.
When the BD-5 rolled out in 1971, it stunned the homebuilt market. It was more of a fighter than a homebuilt, fly-on-the-weekend aircraft: the pilot sat in a semi-reclined seat (a design later adopted by the F-16) to help mitigate G-forces, the canopy was large and offered superb visbility, and the engine was mounted behind the pilot to further streamline the aircraft. In fact, it was so fast that Bede had to add more flaps to the wings to ensure it would land safely. Though the initial BD-5s would be propeller-driven, Bede announced he was working on a jet-powered design as well. He also offered two wing designs, which added or slightly decreased manueverability, allowing a pilot to "work into" the hot BD-5. By the time of its first flight in September 1971, Bede's order book was already filled with 4300 orders.
Unfortunately for Bede, the BD-5 ran into problems. Testing was not smooth, and revealed several issues with the aircraft. These could be solved, but the biggest issue was the Hirth engine, which was specially designed for the BD-5; Hirth struggled to meet orders and then went bankrupt. By that time, Bede was already delivering BD-5s without engines so at least homebuilders could get started. A new engine supplier was found in Japan, but by the time these engines became available, Bede Aircraft itself was in dire straits. Unable to meet orders and spread too thin attempting to design new aircraft, Bede declared bankruptcy in 1979.
This left several thousand owners with BD-5s without engines. Most simply scrapped their kits, but a good number modified them with different engines. It was found that the BD-5 took a lot longer to build than advertised, and when flown, it needed an experienced pilot--if anything, it was too hot, with a tendency to snap roll without warning and a tendency to enter high-speed stalls. Of the first 30 BD-5s that flew, 18 crashed. This made the BD-5 even less popular.
Shortly before the company went bankrupt, Bede did finish and produce a few examples of the jet-powered version, the BD-5J. Though the J lacked the engine issues of the standard BD-5, it was also very difficult to handle. 20 were produced, and about a third have crashed. It did offer superb performance, and gave Bede the honor of entering the Guinness Book of World Records with the smallest jet aircraft ever produced. Of roughly about 300 BD-5s produced, half are known to be still around, though only about 30 are considered flyable.
This is a propeller-driven BD-5, rather than the jet-powered BD-5J. N250TH was built by two brothers in Longmont, Colorado in 1973, and flown for awhile on the airshow circuit. It was donated to the Wings Over the Rockies Museum in 2007. Naturally the Blue Angels never flew the BD-5 (that would have been an interesting show), but it does look pretty good in Blues colors.
This shot shows just how small the BD-5 is: it's displayed next to a T-33, which is not a large aircraft.
Bede BD-5
In 1961, Jim Bede formed the Bede Aircraft Corporation in a successful effort to break into the homebuilt aircraft market. Pilots unable or unwilling to buy a prebuilt aircraft could purchase kits for low prices and build the aircraft themselves. Homebuilts also allowed for a lot of innovation and experimentation. Bede had scored a success with his BD-4 homebuilt, but he had a radical idea for his next design, the BD-5.
When the BD-5 rolled out in 1971, it stunned the homebuilt market. It was more of a fighter than a homebuilt, fly-on-the-weekend aircraft: the pilot sat in a semi-reclined seat (a design later adopted by the F-16) to help mitigate G-forces, the canopy was large and offered superb visbility, and the engine was mounted behind the pilot to further streamline the aircraft. In fact, it was so fast that Bede had to add more flaps to the wings to ensure it would land safely. Though the initial BD-5s would be propeller-driven, Bede announced he was working on a jet-powered design as well. He also offered two wing designs, which added or slightly decreased manueverability, allowing a pilot to "work into" the hot BD-5. By the time of its first flight in September 1971, Bede's order book was already filled with 4300 orders.
Unfortunately for Bede, the BD-5 ran into problems. Testing was not smooth, and revealed several issues with the aircraft. These could be solved, but the biggest issue was the Hirth engine, which was specially designed for the BD-5; Hirth struggled to meet orders and then went bankrupt. By that time, Bede was already delivering BD-5s without engines so at least homebuilders could get started. A new engine supplier was found in Japan, but by the time these engines became available, Bede Aircraft itself was in dire straits. Unable to meet orders and spread too thin attempting to design new aircraft, Bede declared bankruptcy in 1979.
This left several thousand owners with BD-5s without engines. Most simply scrapped their kits, but a good number modified them with different engines. It was found that the BD-5 took a lot longer to build than advertised, and when flown, it needed an experienced pilot--if anything, it was too hot, with a tendency to snap roll without warning and a tendency to enter high-speed stalls. Of the first 30 BD-5s that flew, 18 crashed. This made the BD-5 even less popular.
Shortly before the company went bankrupt, Bede did finish and produce a few examples of the jet-powered version, the BD-5J. Though the J lacked the engine issues of the standard BD-5, it was also very difficult to handle. 20 were produced, and about a third have crashed. It did offer superb performance, and gave Bede the honor of entering the Guinness Book of World Records with the smallest jet aircraft ever produced. Of roughly about 300 BD-5s produced, half are known to be still around, though only about 30 are considered flyable.
This is a propeller-driven BD-5, rather than the jet-powered BD-5J. N250TH was built by two brothers in Longmont, Colorado in 1973, and flown for awhile on the airshow circuit. It was donated to the Wings Over the Rockies Museum in 2007. Naturally the Blue Angels never flew the BD-5 (that would have been an interesting show), but it does look pretty good in Blues colors.
This shot shows just how small the BD-5 is: it's displayed next to a T-33, which is not a large aircraft.