Hartzell offered to send me a 3 blade Trailblazer to try on my 540 powered BH. Today we did the swap. See before and after pics. The original two blade is 84", and the 3 blade new one is 82" diameter. My friend Mike Nellis did the flying. The one fact that we know is that the Trailblazer cut the take off roll down by about 1/3. Mike did several with the original prop, and then did several take offs with the new prop. The take off distance went from 250-275 ft down to about 150-175 feet. The blade area of the 3 blade is much more and we expected better take off thrust. It also spins up faster with the composite blades. On landing as well it would seem shorter landing are likely because when you pull the throttle back and the three blades flatten out - the air brakes come on. Steeper approaches. Hartzell's engineers predicted 20% better take off thrust.
Unfortunately my airspeed/pitot system is having problems. This has been the case since Bob Barrows swapped out my wings for the Model B wings. So on climb and cruise we were unable to make any kind of comparison. The pitot error gave variations all over the place in the VS and airspeed indicator. One minute the airspeed would be indicating 100 MPH lets say. And a few seconds later with no change in attitude it would say 80 mph. So no way to get a comparison unfortunately. Climb SHOULD be a little better and cruise speed should be 1 or 2 kts slower according to Hartzell's engineers. But we were unable to confirm. Mark
Unfortunately my airspeed/pitot system is having problems. This has been the case since Bob Barrows swapped out my wings for the Model B wings. So on climb and cruise we were unable to make any kind of comparison. The pitot error gave variations all over the place in the VS and airspeed indicator. One minute the airspeed would be indicating 100 MPH lets say. And a few seconds later with no change in attitude it would say 80 mph. So no way to get a comparison unfortunately. Climb SHOULD be a little better and cruise speed should be 1 or 2 kts slower according to Hartzell's engineers. But we were unable to confirm. Mark
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