Each blade of an aircraft propeller is essentially a rotating wing.
As a result of their construction, the propeller blades are like
airfoils and produce forces that create the thrust to pull, or push, the
aircraft through the air. The engine furnishes the power needed to
rotate the propeller blades through the air at high speeds, and the
propeller transforms the rotary power of the engine into forward thrust.
A cross-section of a typical propeller blade is shown in Figure 4-35.
This section or blade element is an airfoil comparable to a
cross-section of an aircraft wing. One surface of the blade is cambered
or curved, similar to the upper surface of an aircraft wing, while the
other surface is flat like the bottom surface of a wing. The chord line
is an imaginary line drawn through the blade from its leading edge to
its trailing edge. As in a wing, the leading edge is the thick edge of
the blade that meets the air as the propeller rotates.
Blade angle, usually measured in degrees, is the
angle between the chord of the blade and the plane of rotation and is
measured at a specific point along the length of the blade. [Figure
4-36] blade “face,” the chord line is often drawn along the face of the
propeller blade. Pitch is not blade angle, but because pitch is largely
determined by blade angle, the two terms are often used interchangeably.
An increase or decrease in one is usually associated with an increase
or decrease in the other.
The pitch of a propeller may be designated in inches. A propeller
designated as a “74-48” would be 74 inches in length and have an
effective pitch of 48 inches. The pitch is the distance in inches, which
the propeller would screw through the air in one revolution if there
were no slippage.
When specifying a fixed-pitch propeller for a new
type of aircraft, the manufacturer usually selects one with a pitch
that operates efficiently at the expected cruising speed of the
aircraft. Every fixed-pitch propeller must be a compromise because it
can be efficient at only a given combination of airspeed and revolutions
per minute (rpm). Pilots cannot change this combination in flight.
When the aircraft is at rest on the ground with the engine operating, or
moving slowly at the beginning of takeoff, the propeller efficiency is
very low because the propeller is with sufficient speed to permit reach
their full efficiency. In this blade is turning through the air at
relatively little thrust for the amount it.
Of a propeller, consider first its rotational and forward. As shown by
forces in Figure 4-36, each section of downward and forward. The angle
wind) strikes the propeller blade is produced by this angle causes the
engine side of the propeller blade to pressure, thus creating thrust.
Also creates thrust because it
is shape of a wing. As the air flows pressure on one side is less than
that reaction force is produced in the pressure. The airflow over the
wing force (lift) is upward. In the case mounted in a vertical instead
of a decreased pressure is in front of (thrust) is in a forward
direction. the result of the propeller shape also in terms of the mass
of air these terms, thrust equals mass by slipstream velocity minus The
power expended in producing air mass movement. On average, approximately
80 percent of the torque (total horsepower absorbed by the propeller).
The other 20 percent is lost in friction and slippage. For any speed of
rotation, the horsepower absorbed by the propeller balances the
horsepower delivered by the engine. For any single revolution of the
propeller, the amount of air handled depends on the blade angle, which
determines how big a “bite” of air the propeller takes. Thus, the blade
angle is an excellent means of adjusting the load on the propeller to
control the engine rpm.
The blade angle is also an excellent method of adjusting the AOA of the
propeller. On constant-speed propellers, the blade angle must be
adjusted to provide the most efficient AOA at all engine and aircraft
speeds. Lift versus drag curves, which are drawn for propellers, as well
as wings, indicate that the most efficient AOA is small, varying from
+2° to +4°. The actual blade angle necessary to maintain this small AOA
varies with the forward speed of the aircraft.
The reason a propeller is “twisted” is that the outer parts of the
propeller blades, like all things that turn about a central point,
travel faster than the portions near the hub. [Figure 4-38] If the
blades had the same geometric pitch throughout their lengths, portions
near the hub could have negative AOAs while the propeller tips would be
stalled at cruise speed. Twisting or variations in the geometric pitch
of the blades permits the propeller to operate with a relatively
constant AOA along its length when in cruising flight. Propeller blades
are twisted to change the blade angle in proportion to the differences
in speed of rotation along the length of the propeller, keeping thrust
more nearly equalized along this length.
Usually 1° to 4° provides the most efficient lift/drag ratio, but in
flight the propeller AOA of a fixed-pitch propeller varies—normally from
0° to 15°. This variation is caused by changes in the relative
airstream, which in turn results from changes in aircraft speed. Thus,
propeller AOA is the product of two motions: propeller rotation about
its axis and its forward motion.
Propeller automatically keeps the blade maximum efficiency for most
conditions ight. During takeoff, when maximum power required, the
constant-speed propeller is at blade angle or pitch. The low blade angle
small and efficient with respect to the relative wind. At the same
time, it allows the propeller to handle a smaller mass of air per
revolution. This light load allows the engine to turn at high rpm and to
convert the maximum amount of fuel into heat energy in a given time.
The high rpm also creates maximum thrust because, although the mass of
air handled per revolution is small, the rpm and slipstream velocity are
high, and with the low aircraft speed, there is maximum thrust.
After liftoff, as the speed of the aircraft increases, the
constant-speed propeller automatically changes to a higher angle (or
pitch). Again, the higher blade angle keeps the AOA small and efficient
with respect to the relative wind. The higher blade angle increases the
mass of air handled per revolution. This decreases the engine rpm,
reducing fuel consumption and engine wear, and keeps thrust at a
maximum.
After the takeoff climb is established in an aircraft having a
controllable-pitch propeller, the pilot reduces the power output of the
engine to climb power by first decreasing the manifold pressure and then
increasing the blade angle to lower the rpm.
At cruising altitude, when the aircraft is in level flight and less
power is required than is used in takeoff or climb, the pilot again
reduces engine power by reducing the manifold pressure and then
increasing the blade angle to decrease the rpm. Again, this provides a
torque requirement to match the reduced engine power. Although the mass
of air handled per revolution is greater, it is more than offset by a
decrease in slipstream velocity and an increase in airspeed. The AOA is
still small because the blade angle has been increased with an increase
in airspeed.
0 comments:
Post a Comment