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Old October 20th 17, 11:17 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
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Default "Lippsing" a Q-tip propeller

On Thursday, April 16, 2009 at 6:38:17 AM UTC, MP wrote:
Thought I'd ask for comments before doing something stupid and irreparable
to our propeller.

We have a Hartzell Q-tip prop on our Glasair. That's the fancy bent over tip
that gets all the jokes about the FAA Inspector who grounded a Cheyenne when
the propellor first came out. (Looks like the prop had a ground strike.)
When we got it, the Q-tip was a hot thing, and we were coming off a Prince
P-tip, which also had a turned under "winglet."

Then Paul Lipps came along and wrote that putting a big hunk of metal out
there on the prop tip is about the stupidest thing one could do, since the
prop tip is where velocity - and therefore, drag - is highest. He wrote
about cutting the tips off a Prince wood prop and getting a phenomenal
improvement in propeller efficiency.

I'm not going to cut off the Q-tip entirely. But I thought I would try a
compromise solution, and cut part of it off. I should link a photo to show
you my markups on the tip, but the plan is to cut the front of the winglet
to put a 60 degree shear on the front, like you see on the Katana wingtips
and on Paul Lipps' Lancair. I will be careful, will sand out the stress
risers, etc. I have a good gram scale to weigh the cutoffs to match, and a
dynamic prop balancer to rebalance after the operation.

It's a homebuilt, so I'm deep into "experimental" mode on this one. Anyone
want to warn me about how I might kill myself doing this? Has anyone done
this before?

Thanks,

Mike Palmer





so how did it work?