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A question for all of the pilots, engineers, and people who are a lot
smarter than me. Is there a simple rule of thumb for comparing the amount of thrust or lift you can get from an engine which drives a set of propeller or rotor blades to the amount of thrust you can get from the exhaust of a non-turbo prop engine? For example, a T56-15 from a C-130 has 4,910 SHP and a J85-21 from an F-5E has 5,000 lbs of thrust (These numbers are from a twenty year old book of mine. For the sake of this discussion, lets just assume they are correct). How much actual thrust can you get from the T56 on the C-130? I realize that there must be a lot of variables involved with the propellers or rotors due to different airfoil shapes and the "lift" that they provide and the pitch the blades are set at. But I was wondering if there was a "general rule" that people went by. Keep in mind that math was one of the main reasons that I dropped out of college and I just spend the last twenty years as an Aviation Ordnanceman (Population Control) so any large mathematical equations would go right over my head. I apologize in advance for posting a question with little chance of degrading into a political rant. ![]() Evan Williams |
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In message et, Evan
Williams writes A question for all of the pilots, engineers, and people who are a lot smarter than me. Is there a simple rule of thumb for comparing the amount of thrust or lift you can get from an engine which drives a set of propeller or rotor blades to the amount of thrust you can get from the exhaust of a non-turbo prop engine? Short answer... no. Me clankie, me not know much, but actual thrust depends on atmospheric conditions and airspeed and other factors too. It seems to my non-specialist eye that props are better at turning 'power' into 'thrust' at low speeds, less so as speeds and altitudes increase. For example, a T56-15 from a C-130 has 4,910 SHP and a J85-21 from an F-5E has 5,000 lbs of thrust (These numbers are from a twenty year old book of mine. For the sake of this discussion, lets just assume they are correct). How much actual thrust can you get from the T56 on the C-130? At what airspeed? In what atmospheric conditions? Sorry to sound like a broken record, but the answer is 'it depends'. But I was wondering if there was a "general rule" that people went by. If you want to haul cargo from short airstrips, turboprops. If you want to haul lots of cargo from longer airstrips over longer ranges, turbofans or *maybe* turboprops. For general-purpose multirole fighters, turbofans. For high-altitude interceptors, turbojets. Others who know more will correct me, I'm sure. -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
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On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 23:38:24 +0100, "Paul J. Adam"
wrote: In message et, Evan Williams writes A question for all of the pilots, engineers, and people who are a lot smarter than me. Is there a simple rule of thumb for comparing the amount of thrust or lift you can get from an engine which drives a set of propeller or rotor blades to the amount of thrust you can get from the exhaust of a non-turbo prop engine? Short answer... no. Me clankie, me not know much, but actual thrust depends on atmospheric conditions and airspeed and other factors too. It seems to my non-specialist eye that props are better at turning 'power' into 'thrust' at low speeds, less so as speeds and altitudes increase. For example, a T56-15 from a C-130 has 4,910 SHP and a J85-21 from an F-5E has 5,000 lbs of thrust (These numbers are from a twenty year old book of mine. For the sake of this discussion, lets just assume they are correct). How much actual thrust can you get from the T56 on the C-130? At what airspeed? In what atmospheric conditions? Sorry to sound like a broken record, but the answer is 'it depends'. But I was wondering if there was a "general rule" that people went by. If you want to haul cargo from short airstrips, turboprops. If you want to haul lots of cargo from longer airstrips over longer ranges, turbofans or *maybe* turboprops. For general-purpose multirole fighters, turbofans. For high-altitude interceptors, turbojets. Others who know more will correct me, I'm sure. It's been discussed here in the past and I don't recall there being any definitive answer. The lift fan on the X-35 draws about 28000hp off the main engine to produce 18000 pounds of thrust but then if you hooked that same 28000 to a big helicopter roter you'd generate a LOT more lift. |
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Thank you for the responses. And the very simple explinations.
![]() "out of town" for much of last year so I must have missed the previous thread. Evan Williams "Scott Ferrin" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 23:38:24 +0100, "Paul J. Adam" wrote: In message et, Evan Williams writes A question for all of the pilots, engineers, and people who are a lot smarter than me. Is there a simple rule of thumb for comparing the amount of thrust or lift you can get from an engine which drives a set of propeller or rotor blades to the amount of thrust you can get from the exhaust of a non-turbo prop engine? Short answer... no. Me clankie, me not know much, but actual thrust depends on atmospheric conditions and airspeed and other factors too. It seems to my non-specialist eye that props are better at turning 'power' into 'thrust' at low speeds, less so as speeds and altitudes increase. For example, a T56-15 from a C-130 has 4,910 SHP and a J85-21 from an F-5E has 5,000 lbs of thrust (These numbers are from a twenty year old book of mine. For the sake of this discussion, lets just assume they are correct). How much actual thrust can you get from the T56 on the C-130? At what airspeed? In what atmospheric conditions? Sorry to sound like a broken record, but the answer is 'it depends'. But I was wondering if there was a "general rule" that people went by. If you want to haul cargo from short airstrips, turboprops. If you want to haul lots of cargo from longer airstrips over longer ranges, turbofans or *maybe* turboprops. For general-purpose multirole fighters, turbofans. For high-altitude interceptors, turbojets. Others who know more will correct me, I'm sure. It's been discussed here in the past and I don't recall there being any definitive answer. The lift fan on the X-35 draws about 28000hp off the main engine to produce 18000 pounds of thrust but then if you hooked that same 28000 to a big helicopter roter you'd generate a LOT more lift. |
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Evan Williams wrote:
Thank you for the responses. And the very simple explinations. ![]() "out of town" for much of last year so I must have missed the previous thread. Evan Williams "Scott Ferrin" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 23:38:24 +0100, "Paul J. Adam" wrote: In message et, Evan Williams writes A question for all of the pilots, engineers, and people who are a lot smarter than me. Is there a simple rule of thumb for comparing the amount of thrust or lift you can get from an engine which drives a set of propeller or rotor blades to the amount of thrust you can get from the exhaust of a non-turbo prop engine? Short answer... no. Me clankie, me not know much, but actual thrust depends on atmospheric conditions and airspeed and other factors too. It seems to my non-specialist eye that props are better at turning 'power' into 'thrust' at low speeds, less so as speeds and altitudes increase. For example, a T56-15 from a C-130 has 4,910 SHP and a J85-21 from an F-5E has 5,000 lbs of thrust (These numbers are from a twenty year old book of mine. For the sake of this discussion, lets just assume they are correct). How much actual thrust can you get from the T56 on the C-130? At what airspeed? In what atmospheric conditions? Sorry to sound like a broken record, but the answer is 'it depends'. But I was wondering if there was a "general rule" that people went by. If you want to haul cargo from short airstrips, turboprops. If you want to haul lots of cargo from longer airstrips over longer ranges, turbofans or *maybe* turboprops. For general-purpose multirole fighters, turbofans. For high-altitude interceptors, turbojets. Others who know more will correct me, I'm sure. It's been discussed here in the past and I don't recall there being any definitive answer. The lift fan on the X-35 draws about 28000hp off the main engine to produce 18000 pounds of thrust but then if you hooked that same 28000 to a big helicopter roter you'd generate a LOT more lift. I expect Pete Stickney will be giving you his patented thrust vs. horsepower lecture shortly, if he's not on vacation or otherwise occupied. If youre in a hurry, you could do a google search restricted to this group with as the author and "Maximum Speed of Airliner at Low Altitude" as the subject, and you'll get one of his recent posts which discusses this subject in some detail. The short version is that propeller thrust = horsepower @ 375 mph. HP is greater than thrust below that speed, less above. Guy |
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![]() snip Thank you I expect Pete Stickney will be giving you his patented thrust vs. horsepower lecture shortly, if he's not on vacation or otherwise occupied. If youre in a hurry, you could do a google search restricted to this group with as the author and "Maximum Speed of Airliner at Low Altitude" as the subject, and you'll get one of his recent posts which discusses this subject in some detail. The short version is that propeller thrust = horsepower @ 375 mph. HP is greater than thrust below that speed, less above. Guy |
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In article ,
Guy Alcala writes: Evan Williams wrote: Thank you for the responses. And the very simple explinations. ![]() "out of town" for much of last year so I must have missed the previous thread. I expect Pete Stickney will be giving you his patented thrust vs. horsepower lecture shortly, if he's not on vacation or otherwise occupied. If youre in a hurry, you could do a google search restricted to this group with as the author and "Maximum Speed of Airliner at Low Altitude" as the subject, and you'll get one of his recent posts which discusses this subject in some detail. Just back - I'll get to it tomorrow - right now I'm wading through the "British Night Bombers vs. the P-38" thread. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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![]() The short version is that propeller thrust = horsepower @ 375 mph. HP is greater than thrust below that speed, less above. Guy, is this the same as saying that a turbojet's thrust in pounds at 375mph is the same as a horsepower rating for that engine? Put another way: is a 3,000-lb thrust turbojet equivalent to a 3,000hp recip at 375mph? (I haven't been reading this thread either. Yesterday I discovered that if I posted first, my newsreader downloaded all the new posts, and if I then downloaded all the new posts (as I did) I wiped out the day's work of all these brilliant people.) all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com Expedition sailboat charters www.expeditionsail.com |
#9
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"Evan Williams" wrote in message ink.net...
A question for all of the pilots, engineers, and people who are a lot smarter than me. Is there a simple rule of thumb for comparing the amount of thrust or lift you can get from an engine which drives a set of propeller or rotor blades to the amount of thrust you can get from the exhaust of a non-turbo prop engine? For example, a T56-15 from a C-130 has 4,910 SHP and a J85-21 from an F-5E has 5,000 lbs of thrust (These numbers are from a twenty year old book of mine. For the sake of this discussion, lets just assume they are correct). How much actual thrust can you get from the T56 on the C-130? I realize that there must be a lot of variables involved with the propellers or rotors due to different airfoil shapes and the "lift" that they provide and the pitch the blades are set at. But I was wondering if there was a "general rule" that people went by. Keep in mind that math was one of the main reasons that I dropped out of college and I just spend the last twenty years as an Aviation Ordnanceman (Population Control) so any large mathematical equations would go right over my head. I apologize in advance for posting a question with little chance of degrading into a political rant. ![]() Evan Williams Power = Speed x Thrust. Power in Watts, Speed in meters per second, Thrust in Newtons (about 101 grams). Thus a jet moving at 440mph (200m/sec) with a 2000kg (20,200N) jet engine is equivalent to a 200 x 20,200 = 4040000 watts (4040kW, 5200hp). Propellers are between 75% to 85% efficinet so we would have to add about 25% to those figures to get the shaft horsepower equivalent. Ofcrouse the equation gets a little silly (non linear) about Mach 0.66 or so as compressability reduces propeller efficiency. Turboprops posses substantial jet thrust and inefficient engines in terms of shaft power often perform better due to jet thrust in faster aircraft. The WW2 spitfire merlin possesed about 300lb (1330N) jet thrust. At 440mph (200m/s) and 75% propellor efficiency this equated to 353kw or 460hp. This is one reason NOT to use a turbo charger. |
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