I ordered direct, they were very easy to deal with.Anyone know of a USA Distributor for E-Props? Specifically a 3 blade for the 912 ULS.
A world famous Paramotor pilot Tucker Gott is a US distributor. I doubt he keeps what we need in stock but he can get em.Anyone know of a USA Distributor for E-Props? Specifically a 3 blade for the 912 ULS.
This is where I purchased my E-Prop from:Anyone know of a USA Distributor for E-Props? Specifically a 3 blade for the 912 ULS.
I bought from Larry as well. LOVE this prop.This is where I purchased my E-Prop from:
Larry Mednick
President,
813-810-9262
Evolution Aircraft Inc.
www.EvolutionTrikes.com
Me too. Great price and service. I had what later turned out to be a non-issue and they promptly sent me another prop. He usually has RV-12 props in stock.This is where I purchased my E-Prop from:
Larry Mednick
President,
813-810-9262
Evolution Aircraft Inc.
www.EvolutionTrikes.com
I have been flying mine for just over a year (about 70 hours) and it still looks new. The titanium leading edge protection should handle most abrasive sources. About all I ever see are bug remains, which are cleaned off with water after every flight.I know that the e-props haven’t been used on the RV( particularly the 12) very long, but can anyone report how they have stood up to chips and any other abrasions. I know Piper J3 flys his out of a grass strip. I’m really contemplating getting one, but they aren’t painted and look like the skinny blades would be subject to abrasions?
Does anyone have a current price for the Eprop?Took me 30-40 minutes to adjust blade angles each time I did it. Not difficult at all. I actually enjoyed playing with blade angles.
This is way higher than the quotes I have received.2025 price catalog on Eprops home site list it at 5,470 euros. Or about $6500 Usd.
I suspect the published retail euro price is MSRP in spades, lots of negotiation room. Not sure how tariff may play here, on shore stock inventory may be considerably cheaper than new replacement stock. just shows it is worth calling around and due diligence in shopping.This is way higher than the quotes I have received.
I paid $3,100 through Larry at Evolution Trikes in October. That was with titanium hardware (tightening interval goes to 200 hours) and their little prop pitch tool, blade covers, and some spare hardware, delivered from France in a week. I carefully weighed everything and had a net weight loss of 6 pounds vs. the Sensenich 2-blade. I ran through the climb and cruise testing from Van's PAP again. Cruise indicates 3-4 knots higher but CAS is 2 knots higher, and climb is the same. The beefy pitot tube has a different shape than Van's, which may account for the higher IAS. Easy to adjust the pitch after you have done it a couple of times. The factory site has a video and Larry's site does too. He was very helpful with my questions. Even without the same or better performance I would buy another one for the incredible smoothness. My only minor gripe is they advise against painting the blades, and the aft side of the prop disk is pretty shiny when the sun hits it just right.Does anyone have a current price for the Eprop?
Thanks,
Mitch
N44PL
Most airplane fixed-pitch props are pitched for Climb, Cruise, or Combination Climb/Cruise. The carbon fiber E-Prop is ground adjustable fixed-pitch, but the prop tips flex in flight depending on prop loading. In climb… the prop is loaded heavily and the tips flatten out a little bit and prop behaves like excellent climb prop. When you pitch-over into cruise flight the prop unloads and prop tips revert back to static pitch setting and you then have excellent cruise performance.
Thanks for the explanation! I just ordered a 76" three blade E-prop for my Rans S-7S with a 912 ULS, currently running a 68" three blade Sensenich.Just want to clarify - I see this ‘blade flex’ theory mentioned often on the internet, but this is not how e-Props' Extended Speed Range (ESR) feature works. If you’ve studied aerodynamics at an engineering level you will understand the relationship between wing loading, gust loading, coefficient of lift, angle of attack, etc... In a simplified explanation, refer to the image below where you will see a typical coefficient of lift curve (CZ in figure) increase with an increase in angle of attack (alpha in figure) until the airfoil stalls (top of the curve). An aircraft with a simple airfoil in level flight will typically be at the bottom of the CZ curve represented by the lowest dashed line. A sudden gust or vertical movement of air will suddenly change the angle of attack on the wing and potentially increase the lift by a factor of 3, for example. This represents the airfoil’s sensitivity to turbulence. This sensitivity can be mitigated by using an airfoil with a higher wing loading/angle of attack (further up the curve). Doing so, the same gust may result in an increase in lift by a factor of only 2, for example.
Propeller behavior is similar except that a prop will always be at its greatest angle of attack at zero airspeed (top of the curve) and that angle of attack will then decrease with an increase in forward airspeed. So, in the same way a wing is sensitive to sudden gust loads from rising/falling air, a propeller is sensitive to changes in forward airspeed. Of course, the lift produced by the prop is along the longitudinal axis and referred to as thrust.
What e-Props has done is reduced their propeller’s sensitivity to forward airspeed by increasing its airfoil lift loading as mentioned above. But what really sets them apart is they have further reduced their prop lift coefficient sensitivity by designing their own long, slender, low-drag, highly loaded airfoils that exhibit an aggressive curved-bottom surface in lieu of the archaic flat-bottomed airfoils other companies use (ref figure). This results in an ability to keep changes in the prop lift coefficient (related to changes in forward airspeed) to something closer to a factor of 1.5 with the company claiming that their fixed pitch props achieve performance similar to a constant speed prop up to about 250kph (~155mph).
It’s innovative engineering from France. I have one on my RV-12iS and have seen the same performance increase as others in this forum and couldn’t be happier. Another benefit is the incredible smoothness straight from the factory. I used to experience buzzing/vibration in my feet and on the instrument panel despite achieving 0.03ips during dynamic balancing of the 2-bladed stock propeller. But the e-Prop is perfectly smooth thanks to the balancing performed at the factory. The factory doesn't achieve balancing by simply matching blade weights, they do it by balancing/matching the distribution of mass along the length of the blades.
The prop also has a superior solution to the stock pitot tube bushing, as Jim S mentioned, has a TBO (inspection) of 4000 hours, and a 6-month money-back guarantee. There is a lot of info about the design, testing, and certification on their website.
Jérémie Buiatti, the principal engineer at e-Props, explains his design theory in the video at the bottom of this page: E-PROPS: the lighest Carbon-Titanium Propellers for Aircraft
The video is in French but you can change to English subtitles.
I purchased my prop in Dec 24 from:
Larry Mednick
Evolution Aircraft Inc.
Zephyrhills, FL
https://evolutiontrikes.com/
Tim M
Your video is one of the examples I was referring to when I mentioned seeing the 'blade flex' theory on the internet incorrectly trying to explain e-Props Extended Speed Range (ESR) feature.Here's an interesting take on how E-Props work:
He also has a nice video describing the engineering decisions that went into the 9-series Rotax.