chuckles1225
Well-Known Member
Does anyone have a good physics-based description of why so much more drag is produced by a windmilling propeller than a feathered one? I have heard many illogical descriptions but never a fundamentally sound one that I can feel comfortable teaching my ME students.
For instance, I was taught that a windmilling propeller is comparable to a big circular piece of ply-wood out on the spinner with the diameter of the prop, but this seems incorrect because the surface area of the prop doesn't really change when it is spinning vs. stationary. This leads me to believe that there is something going on aerodynamically.
To take this one step farther, what about the free-spinning prop on a PT-6? Let's say there is a constant 20 knot wind blowing straight off the nose of a King Air while it is sitting shut down on the ground. If the blades were feathered and not spinning and I took an anemometer reading directly behind the prop it would obviously read 20 knots because it is not affected by the blades at all. But what if I gave the blades some pitch and they began to windmill and rotate at several hundred RPM. If I took another anemometer reading directly behind the spinning prop would it still read 20 knots? Would it read less because of the ply-wood hypothesis, or would it read more because the spinning prop is essentially a wing, accelerating air downward (backward in the case of a prop) as it spins?
For instance, I was taught that a windmilling propeller is comparable to a big circular piece of ply-wood out on the spinner with the diameter of the prop, but this seems incorrect because the surface area of the prop doesn't really change when it is spinning vs. stationary. This leads me to believe that there is something going on aerodynamically.
To take this one step farther, what about the free-spinning prop on a PT-6? Let's say there is a constant 20 knot wind blowing straight off the nose of a King Air while it is sitting shut down on the ground. If the blades were feathered and not spinning and I took an anemometer reading directly behind the prop it would obviously read 20 knots because it is not affected by the blades at all. But what if I gave the blades some pitch and they began to windmill and rotate at several hundred RPM. If I took another anemometer reading directly behind the spinning prop would it still read 20 knots? Would it read less because of the ply-wood hypothesis, or would it read more because the spinning prop is essentially a wing, accelerating air downward (backward in the case of a prop) as it spins?