Mauleguy wrote:I am running a Hartzell compact hub, metal blades, 84" diameter. Blade stops are at 8 degrees and 38 degrees according to the prop shop. I have played with the set screw on the hub and seen take off RPM's at 2690 the way it was first set up. I screwed the set screw in 1 turn and that dropped it to 2580 on take off (I did not like it as well so I am back to 2690). I am going to set the governor to allow for higher RPM's (2800-2900) and see what difference this might make. Right now at 2690 it does not feel like it pulls as hard as my 90" fixed pitch did pitched at 33 (turning only 2450 static). I hope to get it where I am using the full 200 hp and it pulls really hard.
I think that makes sense. Here is my logic:
No matter how much pitch the constant speed takes out in order to achieve max RPM, it can't grow the prop longer, so no matter what you do, you are always stuck with the length and whatever pitch is needed to keep from over-rev.
I found this little airplane prop calculator to thought experiment: It's by no means accurate, but I think it makes the point. http://godolloairport.hu/calc/strc_eng/index.htm
If I put in this prop: 90x33 standard propellor CF .71 2580rpm 59F I get right at 179hp.
In order to get 200HP with an 84" prop with the same coefficient/temp/etc at 2690rpm I need a pitch of 42.5".
So even though the old engine is 20hp less, a 90x33 vs 84x42 is a huge difference. Static thrust is 1211 vs 710 and flying speed is 80 vs 108
I wonder if an 88" would split the difference... yea... an 88x35 with the same settings at 2700 gives more static thrust at 861 and flying speed of 90.
I have the same compact hub 84" Harzell for my project. I wish I would have gotten a 86, but on the flip side, I'm sure I'm willing to trade more low end for cruise then you are...
Can you just swap the blades?
