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Brändli BX 2 Cherry

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Top speed
  
260 km/h

Length
  
5.31 m

Wingspan
  
6.98 m

Brändli BX-2 Cherry Max Brndli

The Brändli BX-2 Cherry is two-seat sport homebuilt aircraft that was designed by Max Brändli. More than a hundred had been constructed by 2010.

Contents

Brändli BX-2 Cherry WildbergAIR

Design and development

Brändli BX-2 Cherry WildbergAIR

Max Brändli designed the Cherry in 1979 when he was 55 years old and started its construction in his cellar. He carried out all the structural and aerodynamic calculations and supervised the building, which took 3½ years and 5,500 hours of work. He also flew it on its first flight on 24 April 1982.

Brändli BX-2 Cherry wwwbx2deeassetsimagesOECRWtopgif

The Cherry is a low wing monoplane. It has a wood-framed fuselage and wings with wooden spars, styrofoam cores and glass fibre covering. The inner sections of the wings have constant chord and carry flaps; the outer sections are straight tapered with ailerons. The wings can be removed rapidly for transport. The tail surfaces are straight tapered and the stabilator is fitted with a full-span anti-servo tab.

Brändli BX-2 Cherry Brndli BX2 Cherry Wikipedia

The Cherry seats two, in side-by-side configuration under a large, almost fully transparent, forward sliding canopy. It has a retractable tricycle undercarriage, with simple, outward folding main legs. A conventional undercarriage is an option. The prototype was powered by a 65 hp (49 kW) Continental A65 flat four engine. Since then Cherrys have used flat fours with powers of up to 100 hp (75 kW), including some from the Continental range, the Volkswagen derived Limbach L.2400 and the Rotax 912.

Operational history

Brändli BX-2 Cherry Laser Soft quotCherry BX2 Aircraft My Project and Reference Materialquot

The Cherry is kit built from plans, with some components provided. By 2010, more than 240 sets of plans had been sold and over 100 aircraft completed. In mid-2010, 76 were registered in Europe west of Russia, flying in Austria, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Slovenia and the UK.

Brändli BX-2 Cherry Cherry BX2

The prototype Cherry, HB-YBX flew around Europe for 25 years; in 2009 it crashed after take-off from Sundsvall-Härnösand Airport in Sweden, killing both Dani Gerwer and its designer Max Brändli.

Specifications

Data from Simpson p.114

General characteristics

  • Capacity: 2
  • Length: 5.31 m (17 ft 5 in)
  • Wingspan: 6.98 m (22 ft 11 in)
  • Height: 1.7 m (5 ft 7 in)
  • Empty weight: 320 kg (705 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 550 kg (1,213 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Teledyne Continental C90 4-cylinder horizontally opposed air-cooled, 67 kW (90 hp)
  • Performance

  • Maximum speed: 260 km/h (162 mph; 140 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 220 km/h (137 mph; 119 kn)
  • Range: 800 km (497 mi; 432 nmi)
  • Endurance: 7 h
  • Rate of climb: 3.0 m/s (590 ft/min)
  • References

    Brändli BX-2 Cherry Wikipedia