by thymekiller » Sun Jun 21, 2009 9:03 am
I could be wrong, but I believe that as a general rule: A prop should be about 25% of the wing span, on a rubber powered plane. More than that might produce torque roll, and less is under powered. Not a hard fast law, just a decent starting point.
Balancing. A bad prop can cause a shaky flight and stress your plane, maybe shake it to death. After you balance one, you will see the BIG differance. Spin it on the plane once or twice while holding it in your hand and then again after balancing. You will then understand far better than I can explain with words. This is how I was taught. I was surprized !!! All props need to be balanced, regardless of who made it. I was also surprized at what a differance a tiny drop of lite oil on the prop shaft made.
The weight and pitch of a prop depend on who you ask. Some like a heavy prop because it puts ballast where it does the most good , therefore you need less dead weight in the nose. Some dont like the heavy spinning mass. Take your pick. My knowledge of pitch angle is poor at best, so I'm going to hope someone else will share with all of us.
Balanceing also means checking that both blades have the same pitch angle and are the same lengh.
Hope this helps.
thymekiller
"...the road goes on forever, and the party never ends..."