Monday, December 21, 2009

The first of many

We've now started the rather long and rather laborious process of adding layer after layer of glass to each side of the propeller blades. We're going one layer at 0degrees and then one at 30d and one at 60d.

Here's the first layer of the first side of the first blade. While there will be no more 'shaping' on this blade, there will be a fair bit of trimming and sanding between layers.



No, it won't make the Honda Insight go DDWFTTW

With both blades of the prop bonded to the spar, we had our first chance to see the general look of the entire prop assembly.

One half is filled, shaped and sanded while the other is rough.


Rick putting the finishing touches on one of the blade shapes before we start wrapping it with glass.


Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Rick got the tapered aluminum spar extension (formerly a ski pole) glued into the carbon spar bushing and the final sections bonded. A bit of filling and sanding and we're ready for glass.

We learned today that for some reason, the glass fabric that we've had on order for a week or so was not shipped. A bit of a delay that we weren't expecting.


Sunday, December 13, 2009

Just another Silicon Valley garage project

For the next phase (assembly and layup of the prop) we've had to move venues. With what we've got going at work right now, we don't have the space in the lab to leave the assembly fixures up for a week or so straight. We moved to Rick's garage for a bit.

Here are the first 5 segments evened up and glued. As you can see, the carbon spar ends at this juncture and there is a tapered aluminum spar which goes inside the carbon and continues on out through the smaller sections.

The holes you see along the top of the airfoil are where we poured the resin to saturate the spar/foam interface. The binder clip hold the trailing edge nice and even while the resin cures.

It's all on the table

Ready to glue in the spar.



Coming together

Starting to assemble the segments on the twist fixtures.





Sliced prop

Finished hotwiring the sections mid-afternoon.


Saturday, December 12, 2009

It's a big one.

11 of 16 segments complete. We'll get the rest tomorrow.



We've got it wired.

Spent the day carving blue foam with the hot wire. Got 11 of 16 segments completed.







Nothing sticks

Bob Parks turned us on to some adhesive teflon tape that facilitates smooth hot wire movement across the templates.

After the practice rounds with the cheap pink foam, I think today we're ready to go after the blue foam for real.

Update at 11.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Practice makes ... incremental improvements

We put in a rather short day yesterday and did a bit of cutting practice on cheap construction foam. We had to glue two layers together for some because our pink foam is only 2" think.

We're hoping that we can get our cutting skills up to par before we throw down on the $250 chunks of blue foam.

Here's a root section and a section from about 2/3rds of the way out.




Saturday, December 5, 2009

Checking alignment

Looking down the spar cavity.



Spar check.



First look

We finally got all the ribs on their stands and aligned in a proper row. It was our first chance to see the general shape of the prop in actual 3D.


All in the family

Here's a shot of the entire family of templates. Just behind them are components of the stands that will locate and align them on the build table.

The longest template chord is ~20" and the cord of the tip template is barely 2" long.


Smooth around the edges

The airfoil templates will guide the hot wire through the foam core section. The thin wire tends to catch on the fiberous edges of the plywood and if the wire pauses against the ply for even a moment, it will burn a groove in the wood.

You can make templates out of phenolic sheet or other dense and heat resistant materials, but we don't expect to use these particular templates more than once so we went the cheap route.

I sanded the edges with 600grit sandpaper and then trimmed them out with aluminum tape from the HVAC supply. The wire slides much better and a pause won't burn a groove nearly as fast. It's not perfect, but it's darn affordable.







Friday, December 4, 2009

Rick sent me a few profiles to post.

These are based on a 450lb vehicle/pilot weight. A Crr of .02. Frontal area of 20sf and a Cd of .3. Transmission efficiency of .8 and the prop thrust numbers from JavaProp.

We believe we can do better on some of those above numbers, but also we don't expect the prop to ever be quite as good as theoretical. In the end we think we can get quite close to the below.




Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Where's Waldo?

Somewhere in this block of blue Spyder foam is hidden a large propeller.

Picked up this slab yesterday and hope to have it in many curved pieces by the end of this next weekend.


Monday, November 30, 2009

Occasionally something turns out to be easy

We've been a bit concerned about how easy (or hard) it was going to be to get our foam accurately cut to fit our spars. As previously mentioned our spars are tapered carbon windsurfing masts and while these make almost perfect structural members for our prop, we were unsure as to how accurate we could mate the foam sections.

After laying out our build table with all the template positions, we transfered those marks to our spars and calipered the cones at those locations. We then made up a set of test templates designed to produce a hole in the foam to mate to the conical spar. If after the cut, the foam slid on too far or not far enough, we would then employ the method of cutting the blocks long and trimming them to length after the hole was cut. Rick had a far higher confidence than I that the foam would stop right on the mark when we slid it on.

Rick made a 'foam drill' from a piece of thin wall tubing and I modified the hot wire bow to allow the wire to quickly connect and disconnect. We threw the templates on a scrap of foam, drilled the pilot hole and pulled the wire from the cutter through the pilot.

After hot wire cutting out the plug we put it on the spar and it slid right to a stop on the mark. One less complication to worry about. We will cut our blocks to length and wire cut the airfoil and the spar hole in one operation.

Here's a shot of our test insertion.


Scott Nix donated two more masts

The team would like to thank local windsurfer Scott Nix for donating two carbon windsurfing masts to the cause. These two are particularly nicely matched, and will likely be used as spars for prop #2 in the reasonably likely event that our first effort comes out looking and working like a first effort.

Thanks Scott!