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In article ,
"Tim" wrote: "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() In article , wrote: On May 5, 1:06 pm, Scott Skylane wrote: As an aside, the drag created by a windmilling propeller, i.e. one not feathered and attached to a dead engine, creates as much drag as a flat plate the same size as the area of the prop arc. Nope. The blades cannot be everywhere at once, and so the area affected is no larger than the blade area. Dan YES! In aeronautical engineering analysis, a windmilling prop is considered to be a flat disk, with drag numbers to match. Feathering the prop greatly reduces drag. So you are saying if I loose power at high altitude in a fixed pitch prop aircraft, like a Skyhawk, I will have less drag if I stop the prop, as opposed to letting it windmill? That is correct! -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
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