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2-blade 10-bolt-hole hub ID help please

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  • 2-blade 10-bolt-hole hub ID help please

    Hi Everyone,

    I recently came across a large hub for a 2-blade propeller.

    It has no markings on it at all but the dimensions are:

    Hub diameter: 29cm (About 11 1/2 inches)
    Hub thickness: 25cm (10 inches)

    It has 10 bolt holes, and is fluted on the front of the hub for a few centimetres along the blades. (see photo attached)

    The cross-section of the blade shows 12 layers of laminate, with 13 layers visible at the hub.

    I have tried to ID it from the Hub page on this website, but with no luck.

    This is not like any hub for an early wooden prop hub I have seen before. I'd be grateful for any input.

    Cheers,
    Jason
    Attached Files
    Jason Gehrke, Brisbane, Australia

  • #2
    Hi,
    There is a standard French hub of the 20's with these measurements (millimeters):
    - Hub diameter: 290
    - Hub thickness: 255
    - Bolt holes (10) size: 16
    - Bolt holes circle diameter: 224
    - Center hole: 90.5
    It was named (type): "T long"*** and was in use on some aircarft fitted with 450HP engines.

    Have you removed the metallic plate on the opposite side of your pic? It have to have markings at least on one rounded side of the hub, perhaps faint ones.

    ***There are two kinds of "T" hubs : long (thickness 255mm and bolts size 16mm) and short (thickness 210 and bolts size 14mm).

    Regards,
    PM
    Last edited by pmdec; 10-26-2019, 07:22 PM.

    Comment


    • #3
      Thanks PM, that's really useful information. The hub forms the base of a lamp, and to remove the steel plate from the other side of the hub would involve taking the whole lamp apart, which wasn't possible at the time.

      Do you have any idea what the overall length of the prop might have been, the name of a common maker, or the type of aircraft it might have been fitted to?

      Thanks again for your insights.

      Cheers,

      Jason
      Jason Gehrke, Brisbane, Australia

      Comment


      • #4
        Hi Jason,

        Before any guess about what you asked, you have to:
        - tell about the bolt holes diameter circle, the size of the holes (the best is using bolts or drill bits) and the size on the central hole,
        - show pics of the two sides of the hub.

        Regards,
        PM

        Comment


        • #5
          Hi PM,

          My measurements may not be 100% accurate, but the bolt hole diameter circle is 18.5cm, the size of the holes themselves is 2 or 2.2cm and the central hole itself is 10cm.

          Unfortunately I can't remove the steel plate from the other side of the hub which might reveal any additional stampings at this stage.

          Cheers,

          Jason
          Jason Gehrke, Brisbane, Australia

          Comment


          • #6
            Hi,
            From your pic, I can't understand how the bolt holes circle diameter (18.5 cm) could me smaller than two times the center hole diameter (10 x 2 = 20 cm) as it seems, on the pic, that it is 290 / 113 = ~2.5 larger:
            Attached Files

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by pmdec View Post
              Hi,
              From your pic, I can't understand how the bolt holes circle diameter (18.5 cm) could me smaller than two times the center hole diameter (10 x 2 = 20 cm) as it seems, on the pic, that it is 290 / 113 = ~2.5 larger:
              I wonder if those holes were drilled to accommodate the lamp fixture.

              It looks to me as if there may have been three separate bolt hole circles, with two of them now filled with dowels.

              If you look closely at the hub I think I see witness marks from the metal hub on the left side (yellow arrows) in which case the only original bolt holes would be on the circle marked with a few yellow "x"s, and they look to me as if they have been filled with wooden dowels.
              Attached Files

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Dbahnson View Post
                I wonder if those holes were drilled to accommodate the lamp fixture.

                It looks to me as if there may have been three separate bolt hole circles, with two of them now filled with dowels.

                If you look closely at the hub I think I see witness marks from the metal hub on the left side (yellow arrows) in which case the only original bolt holes would be on the circle marked with a few yellow "x"s, and they look to me as if they have been filled with wooden dowels.
                Hi Dave,

                It is difficult to tell from the picture but I don't think there are any dowel on tne Jason's hub: all are witness marks from the metallic hub. Look at this "T short" hub from a Ratier serial 639 we have. On the view I post, all is the same that for T long hub, excepted the bolt holes size (14mm vs 16).

                But it is sure at least two holes have been redrilled on Jason hub, perhaps all of them.

                On French props from this era (1925-1939), there are markings:
                - on the flat side: Date of making and prop number and/or prop serial, on this one: 17 8 34 for 17th August 1934 and SE 639 for the prop serial. I don't know the meaning of the number 36 (the prop number is 247).
                - and on one of the rounded side the serial again, the prop number, aircraft code and engine code and power, the airworthy stamp, and, very often, a code or a stamp for the maker.

                Regards,
                PM
                Attached Files
                Last edited by pmdec; 10-27-2019, 02:42 PM. Reason: additions and corrections

                Comment


                • #9
                  Thanks PM and Dave. I believe the holes are are original and the "dowels" are witness marks. Two of the holes have been rebored, possibly to mount the hub on a wall before it was later repurposed into a lampstand.
                  Unfortunately I am not able to remove the steel plate from the base of the lamp which covers the other side of the hub that could contain stampings such as in PM's sample photo. I don't currently have access to the hub, but if I can get the plate off and photograph that side, I will upload the photos to this thread.

                  Cheers,
                  Jason
                  Jason Gehrke, Brisbane, Australia

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Hi Jason,

                    If you access the hub, even if you can't remove the steel plate, please post two pics of the sides: faint markings could be there.

                    Regards,
                    PM

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Will do PM, but it may be a while before I can do so.
                      Cheers,
                      Jason
                      Jason Gehrke, Brisbane, Australia

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Westland Wapiti, Bristol Jupiter

                        If in Australia, and Left Hand Tractor, 10 bolt holes, Honduran mahogany, then most likely Westland Wapiti with Bristol Jupiter engine

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Wapiti

                          Wapiti hub details from Bull Creek Aviation Museum, Perth, WA.
                          Attached Files

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Wapiti

                            Full length
                            Attached Files

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Thanks for this. I've seen this prop at Bull Creek but long before I came across the hub, so didn't connect the two.

                              Cheers,

                              Jason
                              Jason Gehrke, Brisbane, Australia

                              Comment

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