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Prop type and wear resistance

 
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jb92563



Joined: 23 Mar 2007
Posts: 314
Location: Southern California

PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 12:06 pm    Post subject: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

I am using a wood prop with some plastic leading edge protection on my UltraStar but notice that it is wearing excessively.

The dominant surface type for Ultralight strips in Socal seems to be a sandy dirt with some gravel thrown in for good measure and it is wearing my wood prop tips at an alarming rate.

How do other composite props compare.

Do they hold up better than the wood?

What prop are you using and how is it holding up on less than ideal runways.
I know...I know...time to upgrade to the FireStar!
But this is my first Kolb so I have to get a taste first.


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Ray

Kolb UltraStar (Cuyuna UL-202)
Moni MotorGlider
Schreder HP-11 Glider
Grob 109 Motorglider


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ElleryWeld(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 2:19 pm    Post subject: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

You get your feet wet in that and you sure will be looking to upgrade soon to a firestar or better

Ellery in Maine
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In a message dated 4/9/2008 4:10:07 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, jb92563(at)yahoo.com writes:
Quote:
--> Kolb-List message posted by: "jb92563" <jb92563(at)yahoo.com>

I am using a wood prop with some plastic leading edge protection on my UltraStar but notice that it is wearing excessively.

The dominant surface type for Ultralight strips in Socal seems to be a sandy dirt with some gravel thrown in for good measure and it is wearing my wood prop tips at an alarming rate.

How do other composite props compare.

Do they hold up better than the wood?

What prop are you using and how is it holding up on less than ideal runways.
I know...I know...time to upgrade to the FireStar!
But this is my first Kolb so I have to get a taste first.

--------
Ray

Kolb UltraStar (Cuyuna UL-202)
Moni MotorGlider
Schreder HP-11 Glider
Riverside County, CA

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Dana



Joined: 13 Dec 2007
Posts: 1047
Location: Connecticut, USA

PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 2:55 pm    Post subject: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

At 04:06 PM 4/9/2008, jb92563 wrote:

Quote:
I know...I know...time to upgrade to the FireStar!
But this is my first Kolb so I have to get a taste first.

Ummm... my sailing friends call this "bigger boat disease". Smile

A lot of people seem to say "The UltraStar is the one plane I wish I'd
never sold." But yeah, a bit more rough field / tall grass capability
might be nice...

-Dana
--
Dyslexics Untie!


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planecrazzzy
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 3:01 pm    Post subject: Re: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

I have the IVO....

I've changed the SS on the leading edge on an earlier prop...
it held up great....

The Prop I have now , I've tried to put them on "twice".... Both times
the stuff wanted to "lift"....( yes, I sealed the edges )

Now I just run it bare naked.....Seems fine , But I'm not in the conditions
that you describe...

Gotta Fly...
Mike & "Jaz" in MN
.
.
.
.
RN-KMA


jb92563 wrote:
I am using a wood prop with some plastic leading edge protection on my UltraStar but notice that it is wearing excessively.

The dominant surface type for Ultralight strips in Socal seems to be a sandy dirt with some gravel thrown in for good measure and it is wearing my wood prop tips at an alarming rate.

How do other composite props compare.

Do they hold up better than the wood?

What prop are you using and how is it holding up on less than ideal runways.
I know...I know...time to upgrade to the FireStar!
But this is my first Kolb so I have to get a taste first.


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George Alexander



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 245
Location: SW Florida

PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 6:20 pm    Post subject: Re: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

jb92563 wrote:
I am using a wood prop with some plastic leading edge protection on my UltraStar but notice that it is wearing excessively.

The dominant surface type for Ultralight strips in Socal seems to be a sandy dirt with some gravel thrown in for good measure and it is wearing my wood prop tips at an alarming rate.

<<<<SNIP>>>>

What prop are you using and how is it holding up on less than ideal runways.

<<<<SNIP>>>>


Ray et al:
I had a Tennessee Prop on a Quicksilver operating off of a steadily deteriorating runway. The prop got chewed up pretty good. They (TPI) put a new leading edge of some very hard substance (urethane rubber as I recall). I ran that prop for a couple of hundred hours with no additional damage and as far as I know, it has accumulated additional hours and is still doing fine.
This was one of TPIs props that they put the edge on.... Don't know if they would do it on another make prop. They also put these edges on their new props as an extra.


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George Alexander
FS II R503
E-LSA N709FS
http://www.oh2fly.net


Last edited by George Alexander on Thu Apr 10, 2008 4:30 am; edited 1 time in total
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George Myers



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 76
Location: San Marcos, Texas

PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 6:46 pm    Post subject: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

I have flown off of gravel for the last 5 years and the prop that holds up
best is the warp drive. I have settled on the nickel tape on the leading
edge and whenever the dings get too bad I strip off the tape, get out the
baking soda and super glue, repair all the dings & put on new tape. In a
pinch I use the foil tape used by A/C guys to make ducts. The plastic tapes
don't last very long.
You can repair the wood props with super glue and baking soda also. A good
file works best for shaping the repair. Then a few coats of spar varnish &
it looks sooooo purty.
I usually just strip down & repaint the warp drive with flat black, but if
you do a really good job of stripping & sanding you can just varnish it and
have a really unique looking prop because the matrix is clear and the carbon
fibers create a neat looking pattern.

jb92563 wrote:
Quote:
I am using a wood prop with some plastic leading edge protection on my
UltraStar but notice that it is wearing excessively.

Quote:

The dominant surface type for Ultralight strips in Socal seems to be a
sandy dirt with some gravel thrown in for good measure and it is wearing my

wood prop tips at an alarming rate.
Quote:

How do other composite props compare.

Do they hold up better than the wood?

What prop are you using and how is it holding up on less than ideal
runways.

Quote:


I know...I know...time to upgrade to the FireStar!
But this is my first Kolb so I have to get a taste first.


--------


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R. Hankins



Joined: 18 Jan 2006
Posts: 185
Location: Grants Pass, Oregon

PostPosted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 9:12 pm    Post subject: Re: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

I have an IVO 2 blade. I replaced the leading edge tapes one year while performing my annual and had the same problems with adhesion. The replacement metal tapes would not hold like the originals. I took a tip from this list and installed the protective tape used on Powerfin props. At the time the strips were less than $2 each so I bought enough to do the job three times. 320 hrs later the same two tapes are still on my prop and the four spares are still in my toolbox. I fly off of crushed granite and sand runways often (probably one out of four landings) and the plastic tape has worked well for me. The firestar does have gobs more clearance, but the tires can really throw sand into the prop if there is dew on the grass.

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Roger in Oregon
1992 KXP 503 - N1782C
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JetPilot



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1246

PostPosted: Sat Apr 12, 2008 7:25 pm    Post subject: Re: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

A composite prop is better than wood in every way. Much stronger, more efficient, better performance, and will keep its balance better. I would not have used a wood prop even if they were giving them away for free.

If you get a composite, the warp drive props are the strongest, with the nickel leading edge, now its not just tape, its nickel implanted into the edge. I also fly a Powerfin, which is great, not as strong as the warp, but with the soft leading edge tape, it does not wear on the leading edge at all.

Mike


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jb92563



Joined: 23 Mar 2007
Posts: 314
Location: Southern California

PostPosted: Mon Apr 14, 2008 6:35 am    Post subject: Re: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

I figured the composite might hold up better with tape.

Even the tape on my wood prop is helping a lot but its old and needs to be replaced and since it does not go all the way to the tips the tips are being worn down.

I'm seriously considering a replacement composite prop now.

I'll could probably even sell the old wood one to some yuppies for $100 who want to decorate the hubbies den or make a clock out of it. Laughing


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Ray

Kolb UltraStar (Cuyuna UL-202)
Moni MotorGlider
Schreder HP-11 Glider
Grob 109 Motorglider


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Dana



Joined: 13 Dec 2007
Posts: 1047
Location: Connecticut, USA

PostPosted: Mon Apr 14, 2008 9:27 am    Post subject: Prop type and wear resistance Reply with quote

At 10:35 AM 4/14/2008, jb92563 wrote:

Quote:
I'll could probably even sell the old wood one to some yuppies for $100
who want to decorate the hubbies den or make a clock out of it. [Laughing]

Don't laugh, I've seen Cub sized Sensenich props stamped "unairworthy" with
"antique propeller" tags on them at flea markets priced at $800 when a
brand new airworthy prop was selling for under $500.

-Dana
--
Canadian DOS prompt: EH?\>


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