YOUNG MICHAEL T· ICAO24 a10350· last seen 1d ago

N1643E is a Beech Bonanza 33, a single-engine piston aircraft operated by YOUNG MICHAEL T. SkyMeter has tracked 158 flights totalling 191 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is KLOM to KPVG. Service window in our records spans 411 days. Of those flights, 52 (32.9%) carry at least one detected incident: a go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Beech Bonanza 33 has a 34 ft wingspan, a maximum takeoff weight of 3,400 lb.

About the Beech Bonanza 33

The Beechcraft 33 Debonair, later rebranded as the Bonanza 33, is the straight-tail sibling of the iconic V-tail Bonanza and represents Beechcraft's answer to pilots who wanted conventional empennage handling without sacrificing the Bonanza's famous speed and comfort. Introduced in 1960 as a lower-cost alternative to the Model 35, the Debonair featured the same rugged all-metal construction and spacious four-to-six-seat cabin but traded the distinctive V-tail for a conventional tail to appeal to more conservative buyers and flight schools. By 1968, Beechcraft dropped the Debonair name entirely and marketed the aircraft simply as the Bonanza 33, acknowledging that pilots valued the straight-tail configuration as much as the original design.

Powered by a Continental IO-520 or IO-550 engine producing between 285 and 300 horsepower depending on the variant, the Bonanza 33 cruises comfortably at 170 knots and climbs efficiently to altitudes where most single-engine pistons struggle. The type's retractable landing gear, constant-speed propeller, and relatively high wing loading give it excellent cross-country performance and stability in turbulence, making it a favorite among serious owner-pilots and small charter operators. The F33A, the most common variant still flying today, features a fuel-injected engine, improved avionics options, and a gross weight of 3,400 pounds.

While it never achieved the cult status of the V-tail Model 35, the straight-tail Bonanza earned a reputation for predictable handling, lower insurance premiums, and easier maintenance, qualities that have kept the type popular in the general aviation fleet for more than six decades. Production continued until 1995, with nearly 4,600 Debonair and Bonanza 33 airframes built. SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.

FLIGHTS
158
all time
FLOWN HOURS
191
tracked time
📍
AIRPORTS VISITED
38
unique
📡
CALLSIGNS
1
52 routes
📅
SERVICE PERIOD
05/28/2025 → 07/14/2026
first → last
INCIDENT RATE
32.9%
52 flagged

Top routes

By flight count

10
3
3
KXBP 16X
3
K21F 16X
3
16X KOLV
2
KRPH 16X
2
2
2
16X KXBP
2
2

Flight numbers

Most-flown by this airframe

1

Aircraft specifications

Beech Bonanza 33

Engines
Single Piston
Vref (approach)
69 kt
MTOW
3,400 lb
Wingspan
34 ft
Length
27 ft
Wake category
Light

Recent flights

Newest 50 operations of N1643E

50
07/14/2026
18m
△ Low approach-stability score
07/10/2026
1h 28m
△ Low approach-stability score
07/04/2026
1h 0m
△ Low approach-stability score
06/20/2026
57m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/28/2026
24m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/28/2026
24m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/14/2026
1h 7m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/12/2026
1h 8m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/08/2026
1h 26m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/03/2026
1h 20m
△ Low approach-stability score
05/02/2026
3h 26m
△ Low approach-stability score
04/30/2026
3h 30m
△ Low approach-stability score
04/23/2026
3h 58m
△ Low approach-stability score
04/17/2026
27m
△ Low approach-stability score
04/06/2026
1h 25m
△ Low approach-stability score
04/02/2026
1h 9m
△ Low approach-stability score
02/09/2026
3h 48m
△ Low approach-stability score
12/02/2025
1h 28m
No alerts
11/02/2025
21m
△ Low approach-stability score
10/31/2025
1h 57m
△ Low approach-stability score
10/31/2025
2h 32m
No alerts
09/25/2025
12m
△ Low approach-stability score
09/20/2025
3h 34m
No alerts
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