I am researching a prop that belonged to my grandfather Raymond David Heine, one of the first Air Mail pilots in the US. it has 8 bolts, measured 5.25" in width, with a center hole of 2'. Though very hard to read, it seems to have the following "serial" numbers etched into the wood around the metal mounts at the center: SC 50059 PART 970___8FT4__OX5
Family lore has it that my grandfather loved to fly his C-3 JN, I have pictures of him standing on a ladder working on the engine. As the vast majority of his air mail colleagues died in near constant crashes, Grandmother told him it was her, or the plane. He struck a compromise by keeping the "B" prop (never mounted it seems), and his wife, which worked out well for me
I can find no references to the Packard Piano Company making props, but my guess is that they were commissioned to do so because there were very few prop makers in WWI?
Family lore has it that my grandfather loved to fly his C-3 JN, I have pictures of him standing on a ladder working on the engine. As the vast majority of his air mail colleagues died in near constant crashes, Grandmother told him it was her, or the plane. He struck a compromise by keeping the "B" prop (never mounted it seems), and his wife, which worked out well for me
I can find no references to the Packard Piano Company making props, but my guess is that they were commissioned to do so because there were very few prop makers in WWI?
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