I called Sensenich yesterday to check up on my prop. Boy did they freak me out. I sent it exactly 1 month ago today. At first they were just going to do a refinish, next they said it needed a rebuild. Now.... Throughout this whole process I had to call them every time for updates on what was going on. So yesterday I decide to call them to make sure they are on schedule for delivery next week. The conversation started with, "Mr. Boyer, I'm not sure how to tell you this.....".
Quite frankly that is not how a Doctor would start a conversation with a person that thinks they have cancer, when actually all they have is a pulled muscle!!!
Turns out that they had removed everything and was down to bare wood. Had re-laminated the hub and put the canvas tips on. At this point, someone noticed that the holes on the engine side of the hub were oblonged (little late wouldn't you think?). BUT, they were oblonged 90 degrees out of what they have ever seen. They asked if the prop were ever loose (which still wouldn't explain it being oblong in the direction they are).
Now, I'm fairly paranoid about the prop. There was an accident here in Georgetown with a guy that threw a blade on his Swearingen. Shook the engine right off the front of the airplane before he could even pull the throttle back! So, NO that sucker has never been loose (at least not in the 5 years I have owned it).
The proposed solution was to drill out the oblong holes, dowel it, and redrill. Sensenich says they will still YellowTag the prop, so I'm not too concerned (it JUST occured to me that It might change it's beautiful appearance though).
Any ideas on how that sucker got oblonged? Also, it would seem that I have overtightened it. I have NEVER gone beyone the 200 in/lb as listed in the bulletin. Theoretically I had another 25 in/lb to tighten it, that I never used. Maybe I should not use a torque wrench and just go with number of turns for the thread count. How are some of you guys doing this?
thanks
Richard Boyer
N95791
Quite frankly that is not how a Doctor would start a conversation with a person that thinks they have cancer, when actually all they have is a pulled muscle!!!
Turns out that they had removed everything and was down to bare wood. Had re-laminated the hub and put the canvas tips on. At this point, someone noticed that the holes on the engine side of the hub were oblonged (little late wouldn't you think?). BUT, they were oblonged 90 degrees out of what they have ever seen. They asked if the prop were ever loose (which still wouldn't explain it being oblong in the direction they are).
Now, I'm fairly paranoid about the prop. There was an accident here in Georgetown with a guy that threw a blade on his Swearingen. Shook the engine right off the front of the airplane before he could even pull the throttle back! So, NO that sucker has never been loose (at least not in the 5 years I have owned it).
The proposed solution was to drill out the oblong holes, dowel it, and redrill. Sensenich says they will still YellowTag the prop, so I'm not too concerned (it JUST occured to me that It might change it's beautiful appearance though).
Any ideas on how that sucker got oblonged? Also, it would seem that I have overtightened it. I have NEVER gone beyone the 200 in/lb as listed in the bulletin. Theoretically I had another 25 in/lb to tighten it, that I never used. Maybe I should not use a torque wrench and just go with number of turns for the thread count. How are some of you guys doing this?
thanks
Richard Boyer
N95791
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