The Bell 47J Ranger is an American single-engine single-rotor light helicopter manufactured by Bell Helicopter. It was an executive variant of the highly successful Bell 47 and was the first helicopter to carry a United States president.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2012) |
| Bell 47J Ranger | |
|---|---|
| Bell 47J Ranger | |
| Role | Utility helicopter Type of aircraft |
| National origin | United States |
| Manufacturer | Bell Helicopter |
| Introduction | 1956 |
| Retired | July 1967 (UH-13J) |
| Status | Retired |
| Number built | 361 |
| Developed from | Bell 47 |
| Developed into | Agusta A.115 |
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.
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.


Slovenia
Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1965–66[21]
General characteristics
Performance
Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
Related lists
Media related to Bell 47J at Wikimedia Commons
| |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model numbers | |||||||
| Civilian names | |||||||
| Military designations | |||||||
| Foreign production |
| ||||||
| Modifications |
| ||||||
| Groups | |||||||
See also: Bell Huey family • Bell JetRanger family | |||||||
Bell Aircraft and Bell Helicopter/Bell Textron aircraft | |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer designations |
|
| Fighter aircraft | |
| Target drones | |
| Attack helicopters | |
| Observation and utility helicopters | |
| Commercial helicopters | |
| Tiltrotors | |
| UAVs | |
| Non-production helicopters | |
| Experimental aircraft | |
| Names |
|
1 Unknown/not assigned | |
United States helicopter designations, Army/Air Force and Tri-Service systems | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Numerical sequence used by USAAC/USAAF/USAF 1941–present; U.S. Army 1948–1956 and 1962–present; U.S. Navy 1962–present | |||||||||
| Army/Air Force sequence (1941–1962) |
| ||||||||
| Tri-service sequence (1962–present) |
| ||||||||
1 Not assigned | |||||||||
USN helicopter designations pre-1962 | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Helicopter, Anti-submarine |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Crane |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Observation |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Trainer pre-1948 |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Trainer 1948-1962 |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Transport 1944-1962 |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Utility pre-1949 |
| ||||||||||
| Helicopter, Utility 1950-1962 |
| ||||||||||
Italian Army helicopter designations, pre–2009 | |
|---|---|
| EA | |
| EC (first sequence) | |
| EC (second sequence) | |
| EES | |
| EM | |
| EOA | |
| ERI | |
| ESC | |
| ETM | |
| |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model numbers | |||||||||||
| Civilian names | |||||||||||
| Military designations | |||||||||||
| Foreign variants |
| ||||||||||
| Modifications | |||||||||||
| Notable aircraft |
| ||||||||||
| Topics |
| ||||||||||
See also: Bell 47 family • Bell Huey family | |||||||||||