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  #1  
Old 12-27-2012, 08:11 AM
thilokind thilokind is offline
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Montabaur, Germany
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Default MT 4 blade MTV 10-B

Hi everyone,

I was planning to put a fix pitched prop on my RV 8A, but I just came accross a MT prop, 4 blade, adjustable pitch (electric). The prop is 174 cm / 68'' and 43 lbs. Since it is electric adjustable pitch I won't need a governour. Questions:
- is the diameter and the weight okay for an RV 8A (battery is in the front)?
- is a 4 blade prop with an IO 360 (180 HP) okay on an RV 8A?

Thanks
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  #2  
Old 12-27-2012, 08:54 AM
Norman CYYJ Norman CYYJ is offline
 
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Location: Victoria B.C.
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It will not be as efficient as a two bladed prop.
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  #3  
Old 12-27-2012, 09:00 AM
pierre smith's Avatar
pierre smith pierre smith is offline
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Louisville, Ga
Posts: 7,840
Default Not necessarily.

The late Paul Lipps put a 4 blade fixed pitch prop of his own design, on a Reno racing biplane and it went faster than with any previous prop.

Best,
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  #4  
Old 12-27-2012, 10:34 AM
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FORANE FORANE is offline
 
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Location: East TN
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Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by thilokind View Post
43 lbs.
- is the diameter and the weight okay for an RV 8A (battery is in the front)?
- is a 4 blade prop with an IO 360 (180 HP) okay on an RV 8A?

Thanks
Don't forget to consider in your weight and balance calculation you must add about 3 lbs to the 43 lb figure for the spinner.

I have the MTV 7 (3 blade) on another experimental (non-rv) with o-320. When I installed it on that plane I had to add a battery behind the baggage area to compensate for balance. I have been generally happy with the prop. Have had a few electrical failures with it resulting in a fixed pitch where it happened to be at time of failure. The older MTV models have 2 power wires soldered to the very front of part number 223 (motor) of the diagram here:
http://www.mt-propeller.com/pdf/datsheet/mtv-10.pdf
The newer models have threaded screws and nutplates there and is a stronger design.

Check your ground clearance and consider the type of strip you intend to operate from. I only have 8 inches ground clearance on my plane.

Consider spinner diameter; mine increased an inch when I went to the MTV.

Consider spinner to cowling gap; mine increased about 3/4 inch when I went to the MTV.
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  #5  
Old 12-28-2012, 12:34 AM
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Snowflake Snowflake is offline
 
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Location: Victoria, BC, Canada
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pierre smith View Post
The late Paul Lipps put a 4 blade fixed pitch prop of his own design, on a Reno racing biplane and it went faster than with any previous prop.
That just means he went from a bunch of sub-optimal two-bladed props to a purpose-built 4-bladed prop tailored for a specific application. If a two-bladed prop were built tailored for the specific application, it would be more efficient.

You cannae change the laws of physics...
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  #6  
Old 12-28-2012, 04:06 AM
humptybump humptybump is offline
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: USA
Posts: 3,179
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I'm sure there is a way to make it work. That said, a 43 lbs propeller will complicate you CG. A 2-blade Catto with nickel edges weighs 12.5 lbs.

You said your battery is forward. You might want to do some calculations with moving your battery aft. Alternately, an LiFePO4 could save you 10-12 lbs.
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  #7  
Old 01-01-2013, 06:00 PM
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RVjim RVjim is offline
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Southern California
Posts: 196
Default 4 blade MT propeller

Quote:
Originally Posted by thilokind View Post
Hi everyone,

I was planning to put a fix pitched prop on my RV 8A, but I just came accross a MT prop, 4 blade, adjustable pitch (electric). The prop is 174 cm / 68'' and 43 lbs. Since it is electric adjustable pitch I won't need a governour. Questions:
- is the diameter and the weight okay for an RV 8A (battery is in the front)?
- is a 4 blade prop with an IO 360 (180 HP) okay on an RV 8A?

Thanks
If you provide the full propeller number, I can tell you the aircraft that uses the MT Propeller.

MT Propeller has always refused to design a 4 blade propeller for the Lyc. 360 engine on a RV aircraft.

What you are very likely to have is a MTV-10-B/174-08, or -12, propeller. This propeller was designed for the Robin DR300 aircraft certified in Europe. The MT Propellers designed for aircraft in Europe are designed for minimum noise.

Jim Ayers
MT Propeller distributor
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  #8  
Old 01-01-2013, 08:51 PM
SvingenB SvingenB is offline
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Norway, Stj?rdal
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snowflake View Post
That just means he went from a bunch of sub-optimal two-bladed props to a purpose-built 4-bladed prop tailored for a specific application. If a two-bladed prop were built tailored for the specific application, it would be more efficient.

You cannae change the laws of physics...
We have a 4 blade on our Pawnee (235 HP) used for glider towing. Lots of power, cool sound

I have never really read or seen that two blades are more efficient than 3 or more on a propeller in a general sense from an engineering point of view. What IS more efficient is to accelerate a large amount of air a little bit, than accelerating a small amount of air a whole lot. Based on that principle a large propeller is more efficient than a small propeller given the same HP (two blades and large diameter is better than 5 blades and small diameter). But that's only one part of the story. When taking into account other factors such as relative tip speed, cord thickness, friction, mach number etc. you cannot any longer say that two blades are more efficient. It is more efficient for some applications, but unefficient - even unusable for others. The laws of physics and/or practicalities makes it unusable.

I guess the Pawnee would in fact be slightly more efficient with two or three blades due to the low operational speeds, but it would also make much more noise, and maybe even go supersonic at the tip, reducing efficiency. Maybe three blades are optimal and two blades are only good for low RPM cruise? Maybe 4 blades is the optimal for glider towing? We want best efficiency at high RPM, at high power.
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  #9  
Old 01-02-2013, 09:41 AM
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RVjim RVjim is offline
 
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Location: Southern California
Posts: 196
Default The 2 blade myth again?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Snowflake View Post
That just means he went from a bunch of sub-optimal two-bladed props to a purpose-built 4-bladed prop tailored for a specific application. If a two-bladed prop were built tailored for the specific application, it would be more efficient.

You cannae change the laws of physics...
There is a performance chart that uses the power coefficient and J factor to determine the number of blades required for maximum efficiency. This is the basis for not using a 4 blade propeller on a Lyc. 360 engine, and for using a 4 blade propeller on a Lyc. 540.

This calculation for the Laws of Physics supports the 2 blade propeller as being the most efficient for low horsepower and low altitude.

Higher horsepower and higher altitude equals more blades.

The 2 blade propeller is great for a 65 hp. Luscome.
It is also great for the RV series at 500 MSL.

I have found that the 3 blade propeller is more efficient for the RV series aircraft at about 7,500'.

I have a 4 blade propeller on my modified Harmon Rocket 2 with a Lyc. IO-540 engine.

The 4 blade propeller is 4 knots faster than the 3 blade propeller at 12,500'.
The 4 blade propeller is 2 knots slower than the 3 blade propeller at 4,000'.
Just as the propeller efficiency chart predicts.

Jim Ayers

Last edited by RVjim : 01-02-2013 at 09:42 AM. Reason: correct technical statement
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  #10  
Old 01-02-2013, 09:57 AM
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Kahuna Kahuna is offline
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Gold Hill, NC25
Posts: 2,398
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RVjim View Post

I have a 4 blade propeller on my modified Harmon Rocket 2 with a Lyc. IO-540 engine.

The 4 blade propeller is 4 knots faster than the 3 blade propeller at 12,500'.
The 4 blade propeller is 2 knots slower than the 3 blade propeller at 4,000'.
Just as the propeller efficiency chart predicts.

Jim Ayers
I notice Jim that you compare the 4 and 3 blade to each other but you do not compare the performance against a 2 blade at any altitude or at all. You mention in your message title 'the 2 blade myth again' but there is no 2 blade data here against the 3 or 4 blade. Perhaps you could give us those performance numbers 2 blade against the 3 & 4 blade too?
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