Bell Helicopter

Bell Helicopter Textron Inc.
Subsidiary
Industry Aerospace
Founded 1935 (1935)
Headquarters Fort Worth, Texas, US
Key people
Mitch Snyder (President & CEO)
Products
Parent Textron
Website www.bellflight.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Bell Helicopter Textron Inc. is an American aerospace manufacturer headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. A subsidiary of Textron, Bell manufactures military rotorcraft in and around Fort Worth, as well as in Amarillo, Texas, and commercial helicopters in Mirabel, Quebec, Canada.

History

Bell Aircraft

The company was founded on July 10, 1935 as Bell Aircraft Corporation by Lawrence Dale Bell in Buffalo, New York. The company focused on the designing and building of fighter aircraft. Their first fighters were the XFM-1 Airacuda, a twin-engine fighter for attacking bombers, and the P-39 Airacobra. The P-59 Airacomet, the first American jet fighter, the P-63 Kingcobra, the successor to the P-39, and the Bell X-1 were also Bell products.[2]

The Bell 47 is displayed at the MoMA
Previous Bell logo

In 1941, Bell hired Arthur M. Young, a talented inventor, to provide expertise for helicopter research and development. It was the foundation for what Bell hoped would be a broader economic base for his company that was not dependent on government contracts. The Bell 30 was their first full-size helicopter (first flight December 29, 1942) and the Bell 47 became the first helicopter in the world rated by a civil aviation authority, becoming a civilian and military success.[2]

Bell Helicopter

Textron purchased Bell Aerospace in 1960. Bell Aerospace was composed of three divisions of Bell Aircraft Corporation, including its helicopter division, which had become its only division still producing complete aircraft. The helicopter division was renamed Bell Helicopter Company and in a few years, with the success of the UH-1 Huey during the Vietnam War, it had established itself as the largest division of Textron. In January 1976, Textron changed the name of the company again to Bell Helicopter Textron.[3]

Bell Helicopter has a close association with AgustaWestland. The partnership dates back to separate manufacturing and technology agreements with Agusta (Bell 47 and Bell 206) and as a sublicence via Agusta with Westland (Bell 47).[4] When the two European firms merged, the partnerships were retained, with the exception of the AB139, which is now known as the AW139. As of 2014, Bell and AW cooperate on the AW609 tiltrotor.[5]

Bell planned to reduce employment by 760 in 2014 as fewer V-22s were made.[5] A rapid prototyping center called XworX assists Bell's other divisions in reducing development time.[6]

The company was rebranded as "Bell" on February 22, 2018.[7]

Product list

Bell 206B JetRanger III
Comparison of the Bell 212 (U.S. Navy HH-1N) and 412 (Mercy Air) at the Mojave Airport
Bell 412EP Griffin HT1 helicopter of the UK Defence Helicopter Flying School

Commercial helicopters

ModelIntro.UntilMTOW (lb/t)Notes
Bell 47194619742,9501.34 based on the Bell 30 prototype, piston engine
Bell 47J Ranger195619672,9501.34 Bell 47 executive variant
Bell 204/20519591980s9,5004.31 Huey family civil variant, single turboshaft
Bell 2061967current3,2001.45 light single or twin turboshaft
Bell 210late 1970s11,200 5.1 205B
Bell 2121968199811,2005.08 Civilian UH-1N Twin Huey
Bell 2141972198115,0006.8 larger Huey
Bell 214ST1982199317,5007.94 medium twin derived from the 214
Bell 222/230197919958,4003.81 light twin
Bell 4071995current6,0002.72 four-blade single derived from the 206L-4
Bell 4121981current11,9005.4 four-blade 212
Bell 427200020106,5502.97 407 derived light twin
Bell 429 GlobalRanger2009current7,0003.2 lengthened 427
Bell 430199520089,3004.22 222/230 stretch
Bell 525 Relentless2018current20,5009.3 in development
Bell 505 Jet Ranger X2017current3,6801.67 206 development

Established in 1986, its Mirabel, Quebec facility assembles and delivers most Bell's commercial helicopters and delivered its 5,000th helicopter on 12 December 2017.[8]

Not produced

Military helicopters

Tiltrotors

V-22 in flight

Projects produced by other companies

References

  1. "About Textron: Our Businesses". October 21, 2015.
  2. 1 2 History of Bell Helicopter Archived June 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.. bellhelicopter.com
  3. "Our History". Bell Training Academy. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  4. "Westland History – Part 4".
  5. 1 2 Oliver Johnson & Elan Head. "Bell CEO outlines European growth plan" Vertical, October 15, 2014. Accessed: October 21 ,2014.
  6. "Bell's XworX studying improved rotor blades". Aviation International News.
  7. "Bell Drops 'Helicopter,' Unveils New Dragonfly Logo".
  8. Mark Huber (December 13, 2017). "Bell Canada Delivers 5,000th Civil Helicopter". AIN.
  • Official website
  • Bell timeline at the Helicopter History Site
  • Video history of Bell Helicopter
  • "Patents owned by Bell Helicopter Textron". US Patent and Trademark Office. Retrieved December 5, 2005.
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