Beech 24 Sierra
Single Piston· 177 globally registered
The Beechcraft Sierra is a four-seat, single-engine piston aircraft that emerged in the late 1960s as Beechcraft's answer to the Piper Arrow and Cessna Cardinal RG. Introduced in 1970 as the Model 24R Sierra, it featured retractable landing gear and a 200-horsepower Lycoming IO-360 engine, offering owner-pilots a step up from fixed-gear trainers with cruise speeds around 145 knots. Beechcraft also produced the fixed-gear Sundowner variant (Model 23) on the same airframe, creating a family of rugged, stable cross-country tourers known for their solid build quality and docile handling characteristics. The Sierra's claim to fame was its combination of Beechcraft's trademark heavy, stable feel with relatively forgiving stall behavior and a roomy cabin—wider than contemporary Pipers and more comfortable for long flights. Production ran until 1983, with approximately 700 Sierras built alongside several thousand Sundowners and Musketeers in the Model 19/23/24 family. While never a blockbuster seller like the Bonanza, the Sierra carved out a loyal following among pilots who valued its honest flying qualities and the prestige of the Beechcraft name without the complexity or cost of a Bonanza. Today the Sierra remains a capable if somewhat overlooked platform in the used aircraft market, prized by owners who appreciate its 800-nautical-mile range, generous useful load, and straightforward systems. Its operating envelope—never-exceed speed of 225 knots indicated, cruise at 145 knots true, and a stall speed around 60 knots with full flaps—makes it a solid instrument platform and cross-country traveler. SkyMeter has tracked 212 flights across 63 airframes and 63 operators, with HOWLAND JAMES the most frequently observed operator.
Safety in context
The incident rate counts flights with ANY safety event detected by SkyMeter — go-arounds (a routine response, not a failure), unstable-approach gate flags (advisory thresholds), rejected takeoffs (the system working as designed), and runway events. It is NOT an accident rate or fatality rate. For accident statistics, refer to the NTSB Aviation Accident Database (USA) or the Aviation Safety Network. See methodology for what each event type measures.
Performance
Speed envelope & approach
Dimensions
Airframe geometry
Weight & identification
Operating limits
Top operators
By fleet size · last 7 days
Safety profile
Flagged flights · last 7 days
Family
Related variants
Recent incidents
Flagged flights of BE24
Recent flights
Real flights of BE24 · airborne ≥ 20 min




