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In article
, "Dave Kearton" wrote: john hawkins wrote: Besides beauty there is another benefit to a wood propellor. No sudden stoppages. The prop just turns into splinters. Don't ask ![]() If such a situation were ever to occur cough where a wooden prop was aaah converted to components, via lets say, nosing over too far and encountering dirt, would you still require an engine rebuild ? Purely hypothetical - of course. Wooden props are interesting for their physics as well. Wooden props do not obey the law of conservation of mass. By empirical experiment, I've demonstrated that a 72 inch wooden prop, spinning at approximately 2800 rpm, will, upon striking asphalt, generate at least twice it's mass, and at least a dozen times it's original volume in splinters. I have filed an invention disclosure for a process to manufacture toothpicks based on this phenomenon. |
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