Brantly International

Brantly International
Industry Manufacturer
Founded 1945
Headquarters Coppell, Texas
Key people
Timothy T. Archer
Products Helicopters
Number of employees
20
Parent Superior Aviation Beijing
Website www.brantly.com

Brantly International Inc. is a helicopter company with its engineering and administrative offices based Coppell, Texas, United States. Manufacturing of Brantly-designed helicopters is now carried out by Qingdao Haili Helicopters of China.[1][2]

History

A Brantly B.2 on display at the Flugausstellung Hermeskeil

Brantly Helicopter

The company started out 1945 as Brantly Helicopter Corporation in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, founded by Newby O. Brantly. Brantly was so impressed with the Sikorsky VS-300 that he decided to design his own helicopter.[3] In 1946 his first helicopter, the Brantly B-1 with coaxial rotors made its first flight. The B-1 was not put into production.

Using lessons learned from the B-1, he decided to build a two-seater with a simple rotor design. This helicopter, the Brantly B-2, made its first flight 1953. In 1957 the company moved to Frederick, Oklahoma, where the B-2 was certified in 1959. He later designed the Brantly 305, a five-seater which made its first flight 1964. It was certified by the FAA in 1965, the same year it entered production.

A Brantly 305 at Kidlington Airport

Lear Jet acquired the Brantly Helicopter Corporation in 1966; at this time the 180,000 sq ft (17,000 m2) factory in Frederick, Oklahoma had 100 employees.[4] The factory moved to Wichita, Kansas in 1969. Aeronautical Research & Development Corporation (ARDC) bought all the rights to Brantly helicopters from Lear Jet in 1969, but they ended operations in early 1970.

Brantly-Hynes

In 1972, the rights were acquired as Brantly Operators Inc. by Michael K. Hynes. He renamed the company in 1975 as Brantly-Hynes Helicopter Inc. Later that year, the Franklin Capital Corp, headed by F. Lee Bailey who also owned Enstrom Helicopter Corporation at that time, purchased the company.[5] Brantly-Hynes originally were just providing product support but later placed the B-2 and 305 back into production.[6]

Brantly International

The new factory in Vernon was built 1989 by Japanese-American businessman James T. Kimura, who renamed the company as Brantly International. In 1994, the ownership was transferred to a Beijing-based company, FESCO. In 1996, they achieved an FAA production certificate. In 2007, a joint venture between Brantly International Inc, Qingdao Wenquan International Aviation Investment Co., Ltd, and Qingdao Brantly Investment Consultation Co., Ltd. was established.[7]

The Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) statistic for US Civil Helicopter Shipments between 1981 and 2007 showed 12 delivered B-2Bs.

As of November 2009, the factory at the Wilbarger County Airport planned to close the plant at the end of 2010, and engineering and administrative offices of Brantly moved to Coppell, Texas.[8] Qingdao Haili Helicopters Co. Ltd. is now the only manufacturer of the B-2B helicopter.[9][10][11]

Cheng Shenzong is the chairman of Qingdao Haili Helicopters.[12] He is also known as the helicopter king of China.[13]

Products

See also

Portal iconAviation portal

References

  1. Aviation Week and Space Technology: 60. 14 October 2013. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Qingdao Haili Helicopter Co. Archived 1 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. The Brantly Helicopter by Kristen Hynes
  4. Flight International, 02 June 1966
  5. Flight International, 13 November 1975
  6. Orbis 1985, p. 838
  7. Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1 June 2009
  8. "Brantly B-2B Helicopter - Home Page". Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  9. Times Record News, 21 November 2009
  10. "Brantly B-2B Helicopter - Company Profile". Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  11. Qingdao Haili Helicopter Co.,ltd
  12. http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20120717000045&cid=1206
  13. AP (13 July 2012). "The 'Helicopter King Of China' Is Quietly Building An Empire". Business Insider. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985). Orbis Publishing. 

External links

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