![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hallo,
i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have aerodynamical optimized spinners. And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other Japanese aircraft had them. What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little hup on their propellers. Thank You and greetings Max |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Max Richter wrote:
Hallo, i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have aerodynamical optimized spinners. And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other Japanese aircraft had them. What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little hup on their propellers. Thank You and greetings Max I think that the reason is that because of the comparatively large frontal area of most radial engines that a spinner is sort of superfluous...IOW. the airstream is backed up well in front of the prop hub therefore it 'makes it's own cone' in front of the prop hub therefore a spinner on the prop hub would serve little or no useful purpose...besides, you don't want the air to be scooted outside the cylinders so what purpose could a spinner provide? I'm open to other opinions...what say?... (The small hub is necessary to contain the prop pitch change mechanisms BTW...) And on second thought the Beechcraft C-45 (Expeditor) does have small spinners on their props...FWIW -- -Gord. (use gordon in email) |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 21:02:11 GMT, Gord Beaman
wrote: Max Richter wrote: Hallo, i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have aerodynamical optimized spinners. And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other Japanese aircraft had them. What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little hup on their propellers. Thank You and greetings Max I think that the reason is that because of the comparatively large frontal area of most radial engines that a spinner is sort of superfluous...IOW. the airstream is backed up well in front of the prop hub therefore it 'makes it's own cone' in front of the prop hub therefore a spinner on the prop hub would serve little or no useful purpose...besides, you don't want the air to be scooted outside the cylinders so what purpose could a spinner provide? I'm open to other opinions...what say?... (The small hub is necessary to contain the prop pitch change mechanisms BTW...) And on second thought the Beechcraft C-45 (Expeditor) does have small spinners on their props...FWIW They were probably not worth much. The Bugsmasher (a/k/a the Smugbasher, a/k/a the SNB, a/k/a the C-45) was not exactly a high speed aircraft. Some civilian versions of the Beech 18 were rather quick (for their time) but still were 150-170 kt. aircraft (at the outside). The cost to fashion an aerodynamic "spinner" probably was not worth the increase in performance. The S2, with which I am very familiar, had just plain, old hubs. :-) Bill Kambic |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Gord Beaman" wrote in message ... So did the Argus with which I'm very familiar too... -- -Gord. Gordon, Was the Canadair Argus an American aircraft? Oops. Regards, Tex |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tex Houston" wrote:
"Gord Beaman" wrote in message .. . So did the Argus with which I'm very familiar too... -- -Gord. Gordon, Was the Canadair Argus an American aircraft? Oops. Regards, Tex No Tex, it was Brit. (and I caught the little jab! Ü) Actually it was a Bristol Britannia originally, they gave Canadair in Montreal the license to build on the original plans and modify them a bunch...musta been a humongous project...good article with what was involved at: http://www.geocities.com/cp107argus/CP107History.html This is a good site for info on this (in it's time) the best ASW aircraft in the world. -- -Gord. (use gordon in email) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tex Houston" wrote in message ... "Gord Beaman" wrote in message ... So did the Argus with which I'm very familiar too... -- -Gord. Gordon, Was the Canadair Argus an American aircraft? It had American engines Oops. Indeed Keith |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Max Richter" wrote in message ... Hallo, i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have aerodynamical optimized spinners. And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other Japanese aircraft had them. What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little hup on their propellers. Thank You and greetings Max Probably because with all the rest of the engine exposed little was to be gained but just looking at photographs try these (all verified by photos). Some of these were built in quantity. Boeing B-15/C-105 Boeing Model 337 Cessna 195 Convair B-36 Lockheed L-1049 Martin AM-1 Martin P4M North American AJ-2 Ryan Spirit of St Louis Vought F4U Regards, Tex Houston |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Max Richter wrote: Hallo, i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have aerodynamical optimized spinners. And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero=B4s and other Japanese aircraft had them. What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little hup on their propellers. Thank You and greetings Here's an example of one aircraft's evolution regarding spinners -- and on-topic for the NG! g XSB2C-1 & prod. -1's had a spinner w/ a 3-blade prop. SB2C-3 w/ a 4-blade prop had no spinner. SB2C-4 w/ a 4-blade prop had a spinner. And finally the SB2C-5 had no spinner w/ it's 4-blade prop. Just by looking over various pubs of the naval a/c which came out of WWII (and those at the start) -- almost all had spinners at some point; some only in the X-version. But the F2A (FWIW) had the spinner up until the -3 version (which never saw front-line service.) It would seem no version of the F4U had spinners. The F8F had no spinner, yet at least one after-war modified Bearcat racer had a very larger spinner. Can't address what it means except to note that by the war's end, no front-line naval a/c had spinners. The other comments all seem logical, yet the SB2C evolution appears rather strange. MW |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Max Richter" wrote in message ... Hallo, i am wondering why American aircraftradialengines have no aerodynamical spinners.Airplanes with inlineengines like P51;P40;P38 and so on have aerodynamical optimized spinners. And German radialengines had spinners like the FW190.Zero´s and other Japanese aircraft had them. What is the reason why the wellbuild American aircraft had just a little hup on their propellers. Thank You and greetings Max Hummmmmm, a little before my time but from what I remember from talks with my grandfather (he was a NAP) and my dad (also a Naval aviator) both whom flew many different types of radial engine aircraft, I think that spinners may have disrupted the air flow. Pre-WWII the intake designs being used were classified. Developed they eventually gave almost a 10% performance improvement over the designs in use in the rest of the world at the time. The Jap "Zero" copied an earlier US intake design which added to its performance, but this design still didn't perform as good as later (early WWII) designs did. A 10% performance gained in aerodynamics and cooling, all due to the shape of the cowling was nothing to pass up. Many, many years have passed since those conversations with my grandfather and my father. I just wish I had paid more attention to what they said about their experiences. My grandfather flew for more than 25 years retiring in 1952 with 33 years in, and my father flew for 19 years before he passed in 1961. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Emergency Procedures | RD | Piloting | 13 | April 11th 04 08:25 PM |
Shutting down engine Question | Lisa | Piloting | 26 | April 5th 04 12:53 AM |
Starting Engine Question (O-320, Warrior) | Lisa | Piloting | 13 | April 1st 04 06:45 AM |
engine overhaul & autopilot question | CriticalMass | Owning | 8 | February 13th 04 06:11 PM |
Rear engine in a crash question | BernadetteTS | Home Built | 17 | November 24th 03 04:10 AM |