I am new to the site as well as computers so excuse any mistakes as I dont know what I am doing! 40 years ago my father gave me a propeller that had hung on the wall of his machine shop for years. I have kept it with the idea of putting a clock in the hub and I recently stumbled across this sight and thought I might not want to damage it as it is in great original used condition. I used the sights instructions to gather the following information. No decal, 74 inch length, the hub is just 5 3/4 inch dia. 6 bolt at 4 1/4 bolt circle dia. Crank flange marking shows the flange was apx. 5 !/4 dia. It has brass tips and leading edge. there are 3 lines of stamped letters in the wood near the hub. First line-DES A105 40,second line-SER 639, third line-ATC757 .This might be nice for a collector not a stupid wall clock. Any info would be helpfull , age , manufactuter, engine , plane etc . thanks
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I can't find that drawing number or Type Certificate number in any of the reference material I have, which includes most Sensenich, Hartzell, Flottorp, Gardner, US Propellers, Fahlin and some other manufacturers.
This one might remain a mystery.Dave
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Like Dave I cannot find that drawing number or Type Certificate number in any of the reference material I have, which includes most Sensenich, Hartzell, Flottorp, Gardner, U.S. Propellers, Fahlin and some other manufacturers.
I would strongly encourage you NOT to damage the prop to mount a clock. New information surfaces and yours may be identifiable in the future. I just learned of a new name (new to me anyway) today but I have nothing more yet.
In my opinion, cutting into a prop dramatically reduces its collector value and cannot be reversed.
Lamar
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