Bell 47J Ranger

Bell 47J Ranger
Bell 47J Ranger
Role Utility helicopter
National origin United States
Manufacturer Bell Helicopter
Introduction 1956
Retired July 1967 (UH-13J)
Status Production completed
Number built 361
Unit cost
$65,000
Developed from Bell 47

The Bell 47J Ranger is an American two-bladed, single engine, light helicopter that was manufactured by Bell Helicopter. It was an executive variant based on the highly successful Bell 47 and was the first helicopter to carry a United States president.

Design and development

The 47J was a four-seat variant of the earlier three-seat Bell 47H. The 47H was a deluxe variant of the 47G with a fully clad fuselage and an enclosed cabin. The 47H proved to be too small, so Bell developed the 47J. The 47J was a single pilot aircraft with the pilot seat and controls centered in the front of the cabin, and positioned close to the 180° view unobstructed Lexan "bubble" windscreen. A single bench seat at the rear of the cabin spanned its entire width and allowed for a passenger capacity limited by weight to typically 3 or 4 adults.

Operational history

In March 1957 two Bell 47Js were bought by the United States Air Force as presidential transport and designated H-13J.[1] On 13 July 1957 a H-13J was the first helicopter used by a United States president when it carried Dwight D. Eisenhower from the White House.[1] In March 1962 the two helicopters were moved from presidential duties but were used as VIP transports for the next five years until retired in July 1967.[1]

Two Bell 47J-2s were used during the 1966 film production of Paradise, Hawaiian Style starring Elvis Presley. Throughout the film Presley's character, Rick Richards, was flying a Bell 47J-2 over the Hawaiian Islands.

Variants

Agusta-Bell 47J Ranger at the Hellenic Air Force Museum at Dekelia (Tatoi), Athens, Greece
Agusta-Bell AB.47J3 Ranger in Italian Carabinieri markings at Pratica di Mare AFB, Italy in 2006
Bell UH-13J Sioux at the National Museum of the United States Air Force
47J Ranger
Production variant powered by a 220hp Lycoming VO-435-A1B engine.,[2] 135 built.
47J-1 Ranger
Military VIP variant as the H-13J, two built.[3]
47J-2 Ranger
Production variant with a 240hp Lycoming VO-540-B1B engine, powered controls and metal blades.,[2] 104 built.
47J-2A Ranger
Production variant with a 260hp Lycoming VO-540-B1B3 engine and a collective boost system, 75 built.
47J-3
Italian built variant by Agusta-Bell.
47J-3B1
High-altitude variant of the 47J-3
47K
Training variant for the United States Navy, see HTL-7.[4]
HUL-1
United States Navy variant with a 260hp VO-435-B1B, 28 built became UH-13P in 1962.[4]
HUL-1G
Two HUL-1s used by the United States Coast Guard, became UH-13Q in 1962.[4]
HUL-1M
Variant of the HUL-1 with a 250shp YT-62-A-3 turboshaft engine, two built became UH-13R in 1962.[4]
HUL-2
Proposed turboshaft-powered variant, not built.[4]
HTL-7
Model 47K training version of the HUL-1 with a modified two-seat cockpit and a 240hp Lycoming O-435-6 engine, 18 built, later designated TH-13N in 1962.
UH-13J
Two Bell 47J-1 Ranger aircraft utilizing the 179 kW Lycoming VO-435-21 engine acquired for VIP transport of the U.S. President by the U.S. Air Force. Originally designated as H-13J until 1962.[2]
UH-13P
United States Navy variant for use aboard ice-breaking ships, Originally designated as the Navy HUL-1.
TH-13N
The HTL-7 re-designated in 1962.[4]
HH-13Q
The HUL-1G re-designated in 1962.[4]
UH-13R
The HUL-1M re-designated in 1962.[4]

Operators

 Argentina
 Colombia
 Greece
 Iceland
 Italy
 Spain
 United States

Aircraft on display

Specifications (Bell 47J-2A)

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1965–66[12]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 National Museum of the United States Air Force Bell UH-13J Sioux fact sheet
  2. 1 2 3 Frawley, page 42
  3. Andrade 1979, p. 188
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Andrade 1979, p. 197
  5. "Prefectura Naval Argentina history". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  6. "World Helicopter Market 1968 pg. 50". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "World Helicopter Market 1968 pg. 52". Retrieved 2013-03-20.
  8. "Italian Gendarmerie AB-47J". Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  9. "World Air Forces 1981 pg 375". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  10. "Spanish Air Force Bell 47J-3B-1 Ranger". Demand media. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  11. 1 2 "The BELL 47 Helicopter Family". bell47.net. Retrieved 2013-03-20.
  12. Taylor 1965, p. 187.

External links

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