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On Nov 20, 2:01*pm, bildan wrote:
As a prior Aeronca owner I take exception to your abuse of the name, good story though. Andy |
#2
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I owned one too. The "standard" wood prop hub had a female tapered shaft
with woodruff key slot. There was a single captive prop nut used to secure the hub to the engine crankshaft that had a male tapered shaft with key. I can see how it could easily launch the prop if that nut wasn't screwed down (120 ft lb torque as I recall). bumper "Andy" wrote in message ... On Nov 20, 2:01 pm, bildan wrote: As a prior Aeronca owner I take exception to your abuse of the name, good story though. Andy |
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Before buying the 4-blade prop, I carefully read the manual. It requires
constant re-torquing of the mounting bolts and if ever oversped by only a few percent, it is to be removed from service. (We all know that all of our tow pilots will immediately confess to such an error, right?) Our club tried one for a while, but removed it in the interest of safety. Climb with a heavy ship on a hot day was very marginal. It was very quiet because that tow plane spent most of the summer in the hangar... At 01:45 21 November 2008, bumper wrote: I owned one too. The "standard" wood prop hub had a female tapered shaft with woodruff key slot. There was a single captive prop nut used to secure the hub to the engine crankshaft that had a male tapered shaft with key. I can see how it could easily launch the prop if that nut wasn't screwed down (120 ft lb torque as I recall). bumper "Andy" wrote in message ... On Nov 20, 2:01 pm, bildan wrote: As a prior Aeronca owner I take exception to your abuse of the name, good story though. Andy |
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On Nov 19, 10:59Â*pm, "noel.wade" wrote:
 Can anyone out there with experience behind both 2-bladed and 4- bladed Pawnees give me an idea of what the performance losses are? My club has debated this off and on, but I was recently at a field with a 4-bladed Pawnee and was much impressed with the lower noise. Lower noise is the point. If you have problems with local residents, or might have in the future, then lower-noise tugs will help your Public Relations effort. The very fact that you have done something, rather than nothing, will help in itself. In the UK we have had some air tow operations closed down after local objections about noise, although winch launching continues at these sites. I fly from Lasham Gliding Centre in the UK, West of London. Although Lasham is in the country (“sticks”, “boondocks” ?), it is not truly rural because many locals who work in the Big City value a quiet time in the country, particularly at weekends. Over the years we have had noise complaints from individuals and, more difficult to deal with, from organised groups. We have been air towing from Lasham since 1950 and most of these people will have moved in since then. However, with over 200 gliders on site we are very busy on soarable days, and even on those that are not particularly soarable, with instructional flying. Many years ago, we therefore agreed a programme to reduce tug noise. This included fitting better silencers to all tug engines (on the other side of the pond you call them mufflers) such as the German Gomolzig series (www.gomolzig.de). Then we fitted four bladed props to all tugs to which this was possible. Cost-wise we staggered this over several years. Lasham owns three 180hp Robin DR400, a 230hp Pawnee and a 180hp Super Cub. All now have four bladers except the Super Cub, which is noticeably more noisy than all of the others. For some reason our engineers found it difficult to fit a four blader to the Cub, although I am aware that they are fitted elsewhere (advice welcome!). Anyway, that is what we did, and we get very few noise complaints today. In addition, our tug pilots are briefed to avoid flying over the local villages below 1500ft AGL. If, on rare occasions now, if we get a complaint from one place, we simply switch the tow pattern to another direction. Conditions with little wind and a low inversion are the worst case for noise on the ground, and in our area Sundays are more sensitive than other days. There was even a time where one of the villages asked the club to attend a village meeting to explain the noise situation. Although this was a tough one, the fact that we were able to say that we had made modifications both to propellors and exhaust noise, and have a map of “avoid areas” went down well. We have few complaints from that area now. Problem is, I've got club members claiming that it'll cost over $10k to do the job, and we'd give up 25% to 30% in performance due to the extra blades. In my experience as a tug pilot both before and after the noise reduction programme, the performance reduction is much less than this. Others who are better qualified will no doubt produce figures, but I would suggest between 5 and 10%. However, if it prevents local inhabitants trying to close your gliding operation down, then it’s worth it! Ian Strachan Lasham Gliding Centre, UK |
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"For some reason our engineers found it difficult to fit a four
blader to the Cub, although I am aware that they are fitted elsewhere (advice welcome!). Anyway, that is what we did, and we get very few noise complaints today." My club (not too far from Cambridge!) got planning permission for its current site conditional on tugs being fitted with silencers (mufflers) and four bladed props. This was nearly 20 years ago so there were no approved mods for our then tugs - a Super Cub and a Citabria. Using a four-bladed ground adjustable prop. tests were done with both. The Citabria was fine and subseqently fitted with a 4-blader. The Super Cub's tailplane and elevator etc. was reported as encountering severe vibration with the 4-blader so it was decided a mod was not appropriate and it was sold and a Rally acquired instead. |
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At the Black Mountains GC, Wales, UK we have been using a 235 Pawnee with a
4 blade prop and silencer for at least 16 years to my knowledge. it will tow a K21 or Duo Discus of a 350 yard downhill grass strip 900ft amsl The initial acceleration is good, but it is thirsty and it dosent like long climb. most of our tows are ridge tows to just over 1000ft agl and there isnt much else we could use anyway Pete have a look at www.blackmountainsgliding.co.uk At 22:59 19 November 2008, noel.wade wrote: Can anyone out there with experience behind both 2-bladed and 4-bladed Pawnees give me an idea of what the performance losses are? My club has debated this off and on, but I was recently at a field with a 4-bladed Pawnee and was much impressed with the lower noise. Problem is, I've got club members claiming that it'll cost over $10k to do the job, and we'd give up 25% to 30% in performance due to the extra blades. Can anyone corroborate those numbers? Thanks, take care, --Noel |
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