On Mar 2, 12:22 pm, "george" wrote:
On Mar 2, 6:02 pm, "Crash Lander" wrote:
"Morgans" wrote in message
...
"Crash Lander" wrote
The Skyfox Gazelle I fly has a wooden prop. It has just been
re-furbished. It truly is an awesome piece of work. One downside however
is that the a/c cannot/should not be flown in even light rain, as the
raindrops pit the prop.
I take that it does not have any metal or resin leading edge inserts to
protect it?
--
Jim in NC
It does have resin leading edge inserts, but they take a beating just from
dry weather flying. I was always paying close attention to them during my
pre-flight inspection, because I was noticing the damage slowly getting
worse from week to week.
It may be a case of once the damage starts, it's all down hill for the
inserts. I'm not sure. Perhaps the new ones will be more durable.
The a/c has no screen wipers anyway. Also, being basically a kit plane, I
can't imagine it's all that water tight! ;-)
Oz Lander
We used to have brass/copper strips on the leading edge of the
propellers.
Easily replaced- Hide quoted text -
Moisture gets under the brass and the wood rots behind it.
The edges of the brass mess up the airflow and reduce the prop's
efficiency. My wooden prop has a leading edge cast into it that's made
of "hard urethane," as the builder told me, and I suspect it's one of
Devcon's many urethane products, perhaps the ceramic-filled one that's
often used for repairing dinged-up machine tool ways or conveyor chain
slideways. Really abrasion-resistant, and after ten years it looks
like new. When I someday get around to building a prop that's what
I'll edge it with.
Here's a couple of their products, but in epoxies:
http://www.devcon.com/devconfamilypr...d=111&catid=15
http://www.devcon.com/devconfamilypr...d=100&catid=19
I can't find the old abrasive-resistant hard urethanes I used to use.
Maybe they dropped them.
Dan