172heavy wrote:There is propeller balancing and then there is propeller balancing. JF Dynamics at El Monte airport CA. (Jim Fackler) I think I have it right. Literally wrote the rules for the FAA.
A good tech can tell you if there internal balance problems or help balance them out by offsetting them at the prop. If you only balance, or check for balance at the front of the engine you may over look or make a balance issue worse at the rear of the engine.
In most every case, assuming there is not mechanical problem with the engine, the prop is balanced by installing the accelerometer at or near the front of the engine case. I've balanced a number of propellers, and it's rare indeed that I don't see final figures of at or below .05 ips.
That said, on one occassion, I could not get a O-470 to smooth out. Turned out one of the rear jugs had a botched weld repair to the head that was substantially increasing compression. I also installed a second accelerometer on an engine while balancing a drive shaft driven Stemme S10-VT. This had nothing to do with the prop itself (it balanced reasonably well), but it did point out an imbalace in the centrifugal clutch mounted to the front of the Rotax 914.
There's nothing magical about propeller balancing. Adjustments are made by adding weight to balance first order frequency (rpm) caused by an imbalance in the rotating mass of the prop/spinner/etc.. If there are strong vibrations occuring at other harmonics (and there will always be some weaker spikes on a frequency spectral analysis), then that is indicative of other problems, engine internals, bad shock mounts, broken engine mounts etc.