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Engine question



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 27th 05, 04:35 PM
Max Richter
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Engine question

Hallo,

i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical
spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have
aerodynamical optimized spinners.
And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other
Japanese aircraft had them.
What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little
hup on their propellers.
Thank You and greetings
Max

  #2  
Old August 27th 05, 10:02 PM
Gord Beaman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Max Richter wrote:

Hallo,

i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical
spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have
aerodynamical optimized spinners.
And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other
Japanese aircraft had them.
What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little
hup on their propellers.
Thank You and greetings
Max


I think that the reason is that because of the comparatively
large frontal area of most radial engines that a spinner is sort
of superfluous...IOW. the airstream is backed up well in front of
the prop hub therefore it 'makes it's own cone' in front of the
prop hub therefore a spinner on the prop hub would serve little
or no useful purpose...besides, you don't want the air to be
scooted outside the cylinders so what purpose could a spinner
provide? I'm open to other opinions...what say?...


(The small hub is necessary to contain the prop pitch change
mechanisms BTW...)

And on second thought the Beechcraft C-45 (Expeditor) does have
small spinners on their props...FWIW
--

-Gord.
(use gordon in email)
  #3  
Old August 27th 05, 11:17 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 21:02:11 GMT, Gord Beaman
wrote:

Max Richter wrote:

Hallo,

i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical
spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have
aerodynamical optimized spinners.
And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other
Japanese aircraft had them.
What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little
hup on their propellers.
Thank You and greetings
Max


I think that the reason is that because of the comparatively
large frontal area of most radial engines that a spinner is sort
of superfluous...IOW. the airstream is backed up well in front of
the prop hub therefore it 'makes it's own cone' in front of the
prop hub therefore a spinner on the prop hub would serve little
or no useful purpose...besides, you don't want the air to be
scooted outside the cylinders so what purpose could a spinner
provide? I'm open to other opinions...what say?...


(The small hub is necessary to contain the prop pitch change
mechanisms BTW...)

And on second thought the Beechcraft C-45 (Expeditor) does have
small spinners on their props...FWIW


They were probably not worth much. The Bugsmasher (a/k/a the
Smugbasher, a/k/a the SNB, a/k/a the C-45) was not exactly a high
speed aircraft. Some civilian versions of the Beech 18 were rather
quick (for their time) but still were 150-170 kt. aircraft (at the
outside).

The cost to fashion an aerodynamic "spinner" probably was not worth
the increase in performance.

The S2, with which I am very familiar, had just plain, old hubs. :-)

Bill Kambic

  #4  
Old August 28th 05, 01:06 AM
Tex Houston
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Max Richter" wrote in message
...
Hallo,

i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical
spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have
aerodynamical optimized spinners.
And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other
Japanese aircraft had them.
What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little
hup on their propellers.
Thank You and greetings
Max


Probably because with all the rest of the engine exposed little was to be
gained but just looking at photographs try these (all verified by photos).
Some of these were built in quantity.

Boeing B-15/C-105
Boeing Model 337
Cessna 195
Convair B-36
Lockheed L-1049
Martin AM-1
Martin P4M
North American AJ-2
Ryan Spirit of St Louis
Vought F4U

Regards,

Tex Houston



  #5  
Old August 28th 05, 01:38 AM
Gord Beaman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

wrote:

On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 21:02:11 GMT, Gord Beaman
wrote:

Max Richter wrote:

Hallo,

i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical
spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have
aerodynamical optimized spinners.
And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other
Japanese aircraft had them.
What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little
hup on their propellers.
Thank You and greetings
Max


I think that the reason is that because of the comparatively
large frontal area of most radial engines that a spinner is sort
of superfluous...IOW. the airstream is backed up well in front of
the prop hub therefore it 'makes it's own cone' in front of the
prop hub therefore a spinner on the prop hub would serve little
or no useful purpose...besides, you don't want the air to be
scooted outside the cylinders so what purpose could a spinner
provide? I'm open to other opinions...what say?...


(The small hub is necessary to contain the prop pitch change
mechanisms BTW...)

And on second thought the Beechcraft C-45 (Expeditor) does have
small spinners on their props...FWIW


They were probably not worth much. The Bugsmasher (a/k/a the
Smugbasher, a/k/a the SNB, a/k/a the C-45) was not exactly a high
speed aircraft. Some civilian versions of the Beech 18 were rather
quick (for their time) but still were 150-170 kt. aircraft (at the
outside).

The cost to fashion an aerodynamic "spinner" probably was not worth
the increase in performance.


But wouldn't it be self defeating to do that?...if you made them
large enough to give you much of an increase in speed then
wouldn't they deprive the cylinders of enough cooling
airflow?...seems to me that they could have gained aerodynamic
efficiency by placing the prop further forward and then narrowing
the frontal air intake with cowlings. I suspect that they need
all the cooling that they now have (IOW, they're designed that
way)

The S2, with which I am very familiar, had just plain, old hubs. :-)

Bill Kambic


So did the Argus with which I'm very familiar too...

--

-Gord.
(use gordon in email)
  #6  
Old August 28th 05, 01:45 AM
Tex Houston
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Gord Beaman" wrote in message
...

So did the Argus with which I'm very familiar too...

--

-Gord.


Gordon,

Was the Canadair Argus an American aircraft?

Oops.

Regards,

Tex


  #7  
Old August 28th 05, 03:06 AM
Gord Beaman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Tex Houston" wrote:


"Gord Beaman" wrote in message
.. .

So did the Argus with which I'm very familiar too...

--

-Gord.


Gordon,

Was the Canadair Argus an American aircraft?

Oops.

Regards,

Tex

No Tex, it was Brit. (and I caught the little jab! Ü) Actually it
was a Bristol Britannia originally, they gave Canadair in
Montreal the license to build on the original plans and modify
them a bunch...musta been a humongous project...good article with
what was involved at:
http://www.geocities.com/cp107argus/CP107History.html

This is a good site for info on this (in it's time) the best ASW
aircraft in the world.

--

-Gord.
(use gordon in email)
  #8  
Old August 28th 05, 03:10 AM
Tex Houston
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Gord Beaman" wrote in message
...
No Tex, it was Brit. (and I caught the little jab! Ü) Actually it
was a Bristol Britannia originally, they gave Canadair in
Montreal the license to build on the original plans and modify
them a bunch...musta been a humongous project...good article with
what was involved at:
http://www.geocities.com/cp107argus/CP107History.html

This is a good site for info on this (in it's time) the best ASW
aircraft in the world.

--

-Gord.



I kind of waited to see if anyone questioned my placing the B-36 on the list
with it's pusher engines.

Regards,

Tex


  #9  
Old August 28th 05, 03:23 AM
Gord Beaman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Tex Houston" wrote:


"Gord Beaman" wrote in message
.. .
No Tex, it was Brit. (and I caught the little jab! Ü) Actually it
was a Bristol Britannia originally, they gave Canadair in
Montreal the license to build on the original plans and modify
them a bunch...musta been a humongous project...good article with
what was involved at:
http://www.geocities.com/cp107argus/CP107History.html

This is a good site for info on this (in it's time) the best ASW
aircraft in the world.

--

-Gord.



I kind of waited to see if anyone questioned my placing the B-36 on the list
with it's pusher engines.

Regards,

Tex

When I read that post I thought "I must answer that but then I
thought "well, they likely 'did' have spinners to help smooth the
airflow as it left the props going backwards...". This 'would'
reduce turbulence (and drag) wouldn't it?...
--

-Gord.
(use gordon in email)
  #10  
Old August 28th 05, 03:35 AM
Tex Houston
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Gord Beaman" wrote in message
...
"Tex Houston" wrote:


"Gord Beaman" wrote in message
. ..
No Tex, it was Brit. (and I caught the little jab! Ü) Actually it
was a Bristol Britannia originally, they gave Canadair in
Montreal the license to build on the original plans and modify
them a bunch...musta been a humongous project...good article with
what was involved at:
http://www.geocities.com/cp107argus/CP107History.html

This is a good site for info on this (in it's time) the best ASW
aircraft in the world.

--

-Gord.



I kind of waited to see if anyone questioned my placing the B-36 on the
list
with it's pusher engines.

Regards,

Tex

When I read that post I thought "I must answer that but then I
thought "well, they likely 'did' have spinners to help smooth the
airflow as it left the props going backwards...". This 'would'
reduce turbulence (and drag) wouldn't it?...
--

-Gord.
(use gordon in email)


I don't know. I ended up including it just for that reason. I'm surprised I
came up with that many examples in only one book.

Tex


 




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