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Advancement of prop blade in flight, new information



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 16th 04, 11:13 PM
AJW
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AJW wrote:

[snip]
For what it's worth, at 150 kts and 2500 RPM means the airplane advances

about
6 feet per prop rev. A two bladed prop means each balde is in air 3 feet

ahead
of the prior blade.


That's the same number I came up with, but that assumes there's a
one-to-one ratio between engine RPM and prop RPM. Is that true of all
single engine piston aircraft? I'm obviously not an AC mechanic, but I
thought I could see a reduction gear in the cowl.

I don't know of a SEL airplane in general use that uses reduction gearing
between the shaft and the prop, Dan.
  #3  
Old August 17th 04, 04:59 AM
Mike Rapoport
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Any airplane with a "G" in its engine designation.

Mike
MU-2

"AJW" wrote in message
...

AJW wrote:

[snip]
For what it's worth, at 150 kts and 2500 RPM means the airplane

advances
about
6 feet per prop rev. A two bladed prop means each balde is in air 3

feet
ahead
of the prior blade.


That's the same number I came up with, but that assumes there's a
one-to-one ratio between engine RPM and prop RPM. Is that true of all
single engine piston aircraft? I'm obviously not an AC mechanic, but I
thought I could see a reduction gear in the cowl.

I don't know of a SEL airplane in general use that uses reduction gearing
between the shaft and the prop, Dan.



  #4  
Old August 17th 04, 09:20 AM
Thomas Borchert
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Ajw,

I don't know of a SEL airplane in general use that uses reduction gearing
between the shaft and the prop, Dan.


All Thielert Centurion driven aircraft - way over 100 and counting.

--
Thomas Borchert (EDDH)

  #5  
Old August 17th 04, 10:14 AM
Dylan Smith
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In article , AJW wrote:
I don't know of a SEL airplane in general use that uses reduction gearing
between the shaft and the prop, Dan.


Many hundreds of examples of Europa aircraft. My friend's Europa runs
the 4-cylinder, opposed, liquid cooled 914S engine at something like
5400RPM in cruise. I think the prop turns less than half that RPM.

--
Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man
Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net
Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net
"Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee"
  #6  
Old August 17th 04, 11:59 AM
Paul Sengupta
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"Dylan Smith" wrote in message
...
In article , AJW

wrote:
I don't know of a SEL airplane in general use that uses reduction

gearing
between the shaft and the prop, Dan.


Many hundreds of examples of Europa aircraft. My friend's Europa runs
the 4-cylinder, opposed, liquid cooled 914S engine at something like
5400RPM in cruise. I think the prop turns less than half that RPM.


Or any Rotax engined plane.

Paul


  #8  
Old August 17th 04, 04:00 PM
Thomas Borchert
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Corky,

You don't see that so much anymore in certified airplanes


But you will, again.

--
Thomas Borchert (EDDH)

  #9  
Old August 28th 04, 01:40 PM
Big John
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Corky

Computer dropped my add on to your posting so will try again.

Besides the round engines, the V's also had gearing. The Merlin in the
P-51 had a two to one (ie, engine ran 3000 rpm on take off and prop
turned 1500 rpm).

Big John

On Tue, 17 Aug 2004 08:03:06 -0400, Corky Scott
wrote:



You don't see that so much anymore in


  #10  
Old August 17th 04, 02:23 PM
Ron Natalie
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"AJW" wrote in message news:20040816181349.12901.00001819@mb-
I don't know of a SEL airplane in general use that uses reduction gearing
between the shaft and the prop, Dan.


My old Navion, Helio Couriers, Republic Seabees, Cessna 175's...
Lots of Rotax powered light planes...


Not overly common, but they are out there.

 




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