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#1
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Anyone else here ever experience one? How did yours happen?
Mine have been ag related and hit ground, rocks, birds, and ? Ever throw off a piece of the prop blade? I lost a piece during climbout of a jungle strip in the Amazon in a C-185. Managed to dead stick it back without any further damage but it took nearly two months to get a replacement. IN the meantime, I used a field expedient and cut off an equal amount from the other blade. We were about 200 miles from civilization on the Rio Curaray. Ah the fun old days.... Ol S&B |
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wrote in message
Anyone else here ever experience one? How did yours happen? Fly long enough and something will hit the fan. I was taxiing out to the runway after a torrential downpour flooded the ramp. I taxiied on the high spots at minimum power just in case. At minimum power (flat pitch) the blade tips are actually causing reverse thrust because of the twist in the blades. I thought I had missed the standing water and the plane flew normally for the rest of the day (10 legs). During a maintenance inspection that evening, I put a protractor on the blades and they were indeed twisted more than the factory meant for them to be. I had caught the blade tips in the water and the reverse angle of the blade tips caused the blades to twist ever so slightly. The prop overhaul with 4 new blades and an engine gearbox teardown came to around $24k not including loss of use and the mechanics' salaries. The prop shop mentioned that if I had not exercised caution by using minimum power, the blade tips would have been nearly flat and wouldn't have twisted the blades. I've been careful to be uncareful ever since. D. |
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George Patterson ) wrote:
wrote: Anyone else here ever experience one? Not yet. Two types of pilots, those that have and those that will?? ![]() -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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![]() "Peter R." wrote: Two types of pilots, those that have and those that will?? ![]() I certainly hope not. George Patterson He who marries for money earns every penny of it. |
#7
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I had two prop strikes on a twin when the nose gear wouldn't come down and I
had to land on the mains. Will never forget the tick-tick-tick of the prop tips on the concrete. Or the short rollout. Or the jaunty angle when deplaning. wrote in message oups.com... Anyone else here ever experience one? How did yours happen? Mine have been ag related and hit ground, rocks, birds, and ? Ever throw off a piece of the prop blade? I lost a piece during climbout of a jungle strip in the Amazon in a C-185. Managed to dead stick it back without any further damage but it took nearly two months to get a replacement. IN the meantime, I used a field expedient and cut off an equal amount from the other blade. We were about 200 miles from civilization on the Rio Curaray. Ah the fun old days.... Ol S&B |
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Anyone else here ever experience one? How did yours happen? Mine have been ag related and hit ground, rocks, birds, and ? Ever throw off a piece of the prop blade? I lost a piece during climbout of a jungle strip in the Amazon in a C-185. Managed to dead stick it back without any further damage but it took nearly two months to get a replacement. IN the meantime, I used a field expedient and cut off an equal amount from the other blade. We were about 200 miles from civilization on the Rio Curaray. Ah the fun old days.... Ol S&B My prop strike was in an ultralight, an Sorrell SNS-8, in Billings. I was practicing short field landings (for going into rancher friends' strips) and braked too hard. Slowly...over it went. Cost about $500 in (2-cycle) engine repairs, plus a new prop. John Lowry Flight Physics |
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