Rob wrote:Hi Battson,
I still have not made the Chamois pursuit
Before I venture down a longwinded Rabbit hole, let me just put it out there, there are currently
NO composite props that meet the criteria of your first post.
No one, is currently making a
Long, 2 bladed, constant speed, composite propellor for the big 6's. Craig Catto is making some dandy, long,
fixed pitch, 4 cyl choices, but no one is currently making anything that will dethrone a 88"-90" C66 in the missions it shines in. And that propellor doesn’t work for you….
All of the props in your OP will take
Superficial, Smooth stone chips just fine. The Aluminum props will just see dings, and lose paint or a touch of metal. The composite props will lose a touch of paint, and probably gain a couple little ugly epoxy patches which can be color matched if you feel so inclined.
Having said that I urge you to not make a purchase based on that single piece of knowledge. After all, buying a $10K-$20K propellor, is a substantial investment, (no matter what your bank account looks like) and more importantly, as Skaly and Slohawk note, a poor choice can leave your $200k bird ground bound, for extended stays.
Things I would urge you to evaluate would be;
1) First and as always, most importantly, Mission, mission, mission.... sounding like a broken record here, but as obvious as it is, if you elect to choose the softest tire on the market, you should have no gripes when it gets cut like soft butter with a hot knife, when it sees shale... choosing the lightest weighing prop can yield similar results. Will the mission need the weight loss more than the robustness? Some spell lightweight W-E-A-K.... in this application, I concur. (But two of my airplanes are still wearing a light weight props

)
2) TBO's.... TBO's are like paychecks. Good bad or indifferent, It's how society has elected to judge a component's net worth. Electing to follow a TBO may a purely personal choice (for some), but as a general rule a component with a shorter TBO, has a shorter TBO for a reason, putting your head in the sand will not make that reason go away
3) Repair / service manuals.... A comprehensive, and open minded look in the manuals the most revered props on this website, will shed far more light that anyones opinion. There ways we simply must maintain these propellors. The books will tell you that information, the salesmen will not, the guy who really wants to believe his $20K investment is superior to others probably won't. In fact he probably hasn't gone down that rabbit hole himself
4) Customer service.... and not from the sales department! Selling $20K props has made them good at making you feel good. Poll the people who have had catastrophic failures, and how they were treated afterwards, because that relationship is likely to be far more important to your continued happiness with a product than the one that is forgotten shortly after you hand over your hard earned cash.
5) The
BIG damage repairs. You wouldn't select a bush beater airplane solely on how well the grease wipes off the belly, don't pick a propellor sole on how it sheds superficial stone damage. Ask how it takes a stop sign, because it's the big damage that's going to leave you parked on a mountain side, not missing paint or dings. You are not buying a small disc'd prop meant to go on the nose of a lightweight acro buzzer, nearest I can tell for your mission, you are buying a giant weed wacker / stickball bat.
Anyways.. these are just some thoughts regarding props in general that anyone should consider. As luck would have it, I also have a bit of Mac (dozens) and MT (only 3) experience, some good, some bad (with both flavors). I can share some of that experience on another post, this afternoon. Skaly's initial post and MT experience does not surprise me in the least bit, nor does G44's. I know people that love them, I know people that hate them. All the reasons above and a few more (not another posters opinion) will determine which category you fall in. For my money MT’s in specific are just like any other prop out there, full of compromises... and merits
Take care, Rob