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![]() "Stealth Pilot" wrote Woods available a - spruce too soft. although the tensile strength is ok the crush strength in the hub will not be sufficient. - birch probably ok. - beech probably very ok - oak probably not the best choice since the wood has chemical interactions with iron. - eucalyptus (which has neat coloration, btw) eucalyptus (sold as "australian oak" in australia), probably euc. deligatensis and about 3 other eucalyptus types can be successful propellor woods. read my caveat that comes later though. - paulownia very soft new zealand wood suitable as a spruce substitute for ribs and the like. probably too soft to make a good prop wood. I guess spruce is widely used in aviation, spruce is used in other areas of wooden aircraft construction but it usually isnt suitable for propellors. The problem I have with it is the huge number of knotholes, which would weaken the prop. glad to hear of your concern! it will save your life. propellor woods need to be denser than the woods used for construction. wooden construction typically uses woods in the order of 25 to 35 pound per cubic foot density. my guess is that propellor woods are best in the 45 to 65 pounds per cubic foot density range. propellor woods need to be perfect because of the stresses they are subjected to. in cruise the tips will be flying around mach 0.8 props are made in laminates about 10mm thick (or less) so that any blemishes and weaknesses can be identified and removed. this makes certain that the prop is of adequate strength and has no stress increasing voids or splits within it. laminating also allows the weight of each blade to be evened up if necessary by end for ending heavier ended laminates. Maple is widely available as flooring. It might be the best choice for a prop. I would add a point that nobody has yet added. It is that the orientation of the grain to the face of the wood in your blanks is very important. The plain sawed boards more often available will make the weakest blanks, because of the way the wood changes with changes of moisture content. The grain needs to be as close to 90 degrees to the face of wood as you can get it. Also, alternate layers so the wood grain lines are opposite in each layer as you go. Something like this: //////////////////////// \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ /////////////////////// \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ /////////////////////// -- Jim in NC |
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On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 09:05:37 -0500, "Morgans"
wrote: "Stealth Pilot" wrote Maple is widely available as flooring. It might be the best choice for a prop. I have often wished I had it available. I would add a point that nobody has yet added. It is that the orientation of the grain to the face of the wood in your blanks is very important. The plain sawed boards more often available will make the weakest blanks, because of the way the wood changes with changes of moisture content. The grain needs to be as close to 90 degrees to the face of wood as you can get it. Also, alternate layers so the wood grain lines are opposite in each layer as you go. Something like this: //////////////////////// \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ /////////////////////// \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ /////////////////////// agreed. there was on my airfield a long time ago a 5/8th scale sidlinger hurricane. this eventually ended up in a museum after a very checkered safety history. at one stage of its life it had a prop made of the most amazing wood. in parts the wood was a tightly curled grain that would probably be described as cranky grain. there is no way in hell that a sane person would have selected such twisted short grained wood in a prop. the prop was used for about a year through the test flying when a retract collapsed on landing. the aircraft described a semi circular skid off the runway, through the dirt, over the taxiway, through even more dirt and came to rest beside the airfield fence. the prop had tried to do some considerable rotary hoeing during the excursion and was smashed into many parts. of course muggins here was fascinated by the cranky grain and made a point of finding all the bits to confirm that it had let go where it appeared to be the most deficient. I was amazed. not one piece of deficient cranky grain had let go in the entire prop. all the breaks were through areas of sound wood. I'm never sure of these certainties any more. btw I once encountered an ultralight at kalgoorlie that had been flown across the nullabor in the middle of summer. according to the cockpit placards the cruise speed was 68knots. it had a reduction belt drive from a moto guzzi V twin. the hand carved prop had a bloody big knot in it! it seemed to be carved from radiata pine and was surviving the flying without a blemish. again certainties seem less certain with age! Stealth (better to just get on with it)Pilot |
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On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 12:18:30 GMT, Stealth Pilot
wrote: On Fri, 29 Jan 2010 10:08:07 -0800 (PST), Oliver Arend wrote: Inspired by a couple of articles on Bob Hoovers blog and the fact that it's likely that my first homebuilt will be slow and VW-powered, I was thinking of making a wood propeller. snip I probably made a beginner's mistake and went to the local home improvement store (Bauhaus, a German chain) to look at the different solid wood boards they offered. The good side: The choice is huge. The bad side: I have no idea if the stuff is any good. Woods available a - spruce too soft. although the tensile strength is ok the crush strength in the hub will not be sufficient. - birch probably ok. - beech probably very ok - oak probably not the best choice since the wood has chemical interactions with iron. - eucalyptus (which has neat coloration, btw) eucalyptus (sold as "australian oak" in australia), probably euc. deligatensis and about 3 other eucalyptus types can be successful propellor woods. read my caveat that comes later though. - paulownia very soft new zealand wood suitable as a spruce substitute for ribs and the like. probably too soft to make a good prop wood. I guess spruce is widely used in aviation, spruce is used in other areas of wooden aircraft construction but it usually isnt suitable for propellors. The problem I have with it is the huge number of knotholes, which would weaken the prop. glad to hear of your concern! it will save your life. propellor woods need to be denser than the woods used for construction. wooden construction typically uses woods in the order of 25 to 35 pound per cubic foot density. my guess is that propellor woods are best in the 45 to 65 pounds per cubic foot density range. propellor woods need to be perfect because of the stresses they are subjected to. in cruise the tips will be flying around mach 0.8 props are made in laminates about 10mm thick (or less) so that any blemishes and weaknesses can be identified and removed. this makes certain that the prop is of adequate strength and has no stress increasing voids or splits within it. laminating also allows the weight of each blade to be evened up if necessary by end for ending heavier ended laminates. as bob hoover says, try as you may, your first prop will be a junk item. your second prop will probably be usable though. my first prop was in eucalyptus deligatensis, was all glued up and shmick (...an australian term for bonzer, which is an australian term for pretty near perfect) I carved the back faces by the old practise of tenon saw cuts almost down to the face and chiseling out the waste then rasp and sanding to the final shape. the rear faces looked bloody beautiful. all the cutaway glue joints were broken and found to have impressive strengths. work interrupted and I had to leave it for a few months. on my prop the back face is recessed. note that the front face is the datum. to do the recess I set up my saw bench to the depth needed and passed the half carved blank back and forth across the circular blade to cut out to the depth. something about the eucalyptus makes it difficult sawing and the rear face was left less than perfect. work interrupted again. when I bought my knee mill I realised that by putting the front face of the prop face down on the milling table I could traverse a cutter to correct my datum problems with the rear face of the hub. in practise this worked well. however..... while I was sitting there traversing the cutter (manual mill controls) I noticed a dark line in one of the joints that shouldnt have been there. I cleaned up a thin automotive feeler gauge and probed the dark line. to my horror the feeler could be pushed in full depth. doesnt end there though. the feeler could be slid along quite a way. then I noticed another dark line. the feeler could be slid in full depth and moved quite a distance. then I noticed another dark line. ...and another. ...and another. I went back and tested to destruction the joints in all the cutaway chips. all showed perfect glue strengths. to admit that this caused some consternation is to understate the confusion totally. how could joints just a few millimeters apart be so different? I even located chips that came off right adjacent to some of the cracks. the jointing in the chips was perfect while the actual blade was utterly incompetent. I mulled over this for some weeks before deciding that the bandsaw would answer my questions. it would also prevent the folly of trying to repair the half shaped blank. when I had bandsawed the prop into six inch lengths I went to town on destructive testing to understand what had gone wrong. I deduced 3 things. 1...the wood was not fully cured (had not lost all its surplus cellular water)and the idle period during summer had seen the wood do some additional slight shrinkage. this was evident in the very slight cupping of the faces I had tried to glue. 2...the wood showed a trait of eucalyptus that I was referring to previously when I made mention of a caveat. occasionally the wood shows a waxy surface that is hard to detect and quite happily ruins attempts to glue the wood. I'm told that cabinet makers will wash down the surface with MEK thinners and Acetone thinners to dissolve the waxes from the glue surface. evidently when dried off these will glue satisfactorily. I've yet to try this but be warned! also glue squeeze out gives absolutely no hint of surface adhesion problems. 3... the smaller size of the chips meant that the wood had more surface area to evaporate water from and the distortions that resulted in cupping in the blank didnt exist in the chips. these differential shrinkages can create enormous shear forces in the glue joint. the waxiness in the eucalyptus was so pervasive in places that the glue had cured without bonding to either adjacent surface! I hope something is learnt from all this. I'm goint to try making prop number two in a few months time. on the airfield a few months ago a commercial wood prop was investigated for a paint crack. it too was found to be a dry joint for half a blade. it doesnt just bite us amateurs. Stealth Pilot Gluing "gum" is a lost cause. |
#4
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