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#1
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I am an historian who is writing a nonfiction book involving WWII B-24 airmen. I have done considerable research on B-24s, but I am not a pilot. In my book, I tell of an incident in which an engine died and was feathered. I have been repeatedly told, and have repeatedly read, that feathering is done to reduce drag generated by a propeller in a dead engine. But a pilot with whom I was conversing said that he believed that part of the problem in a dead, unfeathered engine is the windmilling driving the dead engine, not just the angle of the prop.
Can anyone clarify this? Does one feather an engine simply to reduce the drag generated by the angle of the propeller, or it is also to stop the engine from turning? If the latter is correct, why? Thanks to everyone. |
#2
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Flanagan wrote:
/snip/ Can anyone clarify this? Does one feather an engine simply to reduce the drag generated by the angle of the propeller, or it is also to stop the engine from turning? If the latter is correct, why? Thanks to everyone. Flanagan, To clarify, the term "feathering an engine" actually means "feathering the propeller". The blades of the prop are twisted in the hub such that they are parallel with the airflow, and thus present minimal drag, to assist the aircraft in continuing flight with one less powerplant in operation. As a result of this, no lift is generated by the blades, and thus the prop, and the engine it's attached to, stops rotating. 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. To answer your question, yes, stopping engine rotation is desireable for several reasons. If the engine was experiencing some sort of internal failure, stopping rotation will contain damage to whatever component was affected, and hopefully preserve the rest for future use. If the engine was on fire, and the aircraft is equipped with fire fighting agent, you want to stop the airflow from the prop, as it tends to dissipate the agent, instead of letting it do it's work. And obviously in the case of fire, a turning engine may well pump more fuel in to the conflagration to begin with. Hope this helps. Happy Flying! Scott Skylane |
#3
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Dear Scott,
It is so kind of you to reply, and your explanation is so interesting. Thank you! Quote:
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#4
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Dear Scott,
It is so kind of you to reply, and your explanation is so interesting. Thank you! Quote:
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#5
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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 |
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#7
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#8
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![]() "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? |
#9
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![]() "Tim" wrote in message m... 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? Yes, but with a fixed pitch prop you may or may not be able to stop the prop by slowing down to a near stall. Once stopped, it may or may not stay stopped at best glide speed. It would depend on the pitch of your prop, the compression of your engine, your plane's best glide speed, the quality of the pilot's speed control, and the phase of the moon. Vaughn |
#10
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![]() "vaughn" wrote in message ... "Tim" wrote in message m... 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? Yes, but with a fixed pitch prop you may or may not be able to stop the prop by slowing down to a near stall. Once stopped, it may or may not stay stopped at best glide speed. It would depend on the pitch of your prop, the compression of your engine, your plane's best glide speed, the quality of the pilot's speed control, and the phase of the moon. Vaughn Are you high? Have you actually done it? I can assure you, all aspects of it are much easier than you imply. |
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