ragedracer1977 Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 I bet was exciting. All I know is pilot reported engine failure and landed safely. 4 Quote
Bartman Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 Wow ! We always check the prop for nicks that can propagate, but I don't see anything on the closeup. Quote
ragedracer1977 Posted March 8 Author Report Posted March 8 I realized that’s an L. Porsche Mooney. Wonder if it’s converted to an io-550 Quote
bluehighwayflyer Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 Yes. If it is an L it has definitely been converted. The original L cowling looked totally different. ”Props” to the pilot. Well done, Sir. 1 Quote
MikeOH Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 Isn’t that the new 2 1/2 blade STC for those that can’t decide between 2 and 3 blades? I understand they’re not quite as smooth, however 1 1 Quote
Hank Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 11 minutes ago, 201er said: I thought 2 blade is supposed to be faster My C has a 3-blade Hartzell, and I seem to cruise between book and book+5 mph. The extra blade helps with climb, and makes a good airbrake when I come into the pattern too fast, just push it full forward--i can hear and feel it working. 1 Quote
Coachella Bravo Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 Its a new prototype, 3 blade for takeoff and climb, 2 blades for HS cruise. ;-) Quote
Schllc Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 I can’t even imagine the vibration/oscillation that engine was going through. I always wondered what would happen if you lost a blade in cruise. it probably wasn’t as bad with the heavy half staying on the plane. im dying to know if he shut down the engine to land. I’ve always thought you would have to… Quote
WilliamR Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 So very lucky from what I assume was very quick action to shut the engine down. I was acquainted with two pilots in separate similar incidents that perished. Both on takeoff. One was a partial blade separation and the other was a full blade separation. Neither plane traveled more than 0.5 miles before crashing. First was fatigue on a fixed pitch prop. The second was improper prop maintenance on a constant speed. William Quote
201er Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 Interesting that there doesn't appear to be any damage to the airframe. Where did the blade go? Lucky that it didn't go through the windshield! Quote
Schllc Posted March 8 Report Posted March 8 2 hours ago, 201er said: Interesting that there doesn't appear to be any damage to the airframe. Where did the blade go? Lucky that it didn't go through the windshield! I’m pretty sure that centrifugal force would preclude it from coming even close to the airplane. I would think vibration damage could be bad enough to rip the engine from the plane. 5 Quote
Bartman Posted Monday at 01:22 AM Report Posted Monday at 01:22 AM On 3/8/2025 at 2:09 PM, Schllc said: I can’t even imagine the vibration/oscillation that engine was going through. I always wondered what would happen if you lost a blade in cruise. it probably wasn’t as bad with the heavy half staying on the plane. im dying to know if he shut down the engine to land. I’ve always thought you would have to… Look at the misalignment between the cowl and the spinner. I would think the engine mount and Lord shock mounts took a beating in the few seconds she was at full RPM. That is one lucky pilot. 1 Quote
exM20K Posted Monday at 02:47 AM Report Posted Monday at 02:47 AM On another forum, a pilot friend of the mishap pilot reported that (paraphrasing): the mishap pilot thought he lost a cylinder at 3500’, was astonished at the vibration, and immediately shut it down. He dead sticked it to that landing. Well done. Along that route, it looks like the prop picked the best available time and place to depart. I’m not a socal flyer, but from ForeFlight, the coast looks pretty inhospitable for a forced landing. -dan 2 Quote
Schllc Posted Monday at 03:13 AM Report Posted Monday at 03:13 AM That blade looks like a casting in that picture. I always thought they were machined out of billet for this reason. it is possible the billet had a defect but it’s a whole lot rarer than it is with cast aluminum. defects from porosity in casting is very easy, and once that corrosion starts its inexorable. wonder if McCauley is going to replace it so they can analyze. Quote
DXB Posted Monday at 11:32 AM Report Posted Monday at 11:32 AM I imagine this requires crank inspection like a prop strike? The asymmetric loads must be enormous 1 Quote
MikeOH Posted Monday at 06:39 PM Report Posted Monday at 06:39 PM 7 hours ago, DXB said: I imagine this requires crank inspection like a prop strike? The asymmetric loads must be enormous I'm typically not one for 'overkill' solutions, but I'd NEVER trust that engine again, even after a complete overhaul. I can't imagine the over stress placed on EVERYTHING, engine cases included. 1 Quote
MikeOH Posted Monday at 06:42 PM Report Posted Monday at 06:42 PM 15 hours ago, Schllc said: That blade looks like a casting in that picture. I always thought they were machined out of billet for this reason. it is possible the billet had a defect but it’s a whole lot rarer than it is with cast aluminum. defects from porosity in casting is very easy, and once that corrosion starts its inexorable. wonder if McCauley is going to replace it so they can analyze. How is an aluminum billet made? Doesn't it have to be 'cast' as well? Also, isn't that 'rough' appearance typical of any metallic fracture type failure? I.e., I wouldn't expect a 'smooth' surface. Quote
Marc_B Posted Monday at 06:57 PM Report Posted Monday at 06:57 PM 16 minutes ago, MikeOH said: I'm typically not one for 'overkill' solutions, but I'd NEVER trust that engine again, even after a complete overhaul. I can't imagine the over stress placed on EVERYTHING, engine cases included. Makes me wonder...what happens to engines with catastrophic failures or that were involved in incidents such as this? Does this get returned as a "core" with a purchase of a new/reman engine and go back into the pool of parts? I'm not sure I completely understand the testing process for reman engine parts to begin with... 1 Quote
MikeOH Posted Monday at 07:00 PM Report Posted Monday at 07:00 PM 1 minute ago, Marc_B said: Makes me wonder...what happens to engines with catastrophic failures or that were involved in incidents such as this? Does this get returned as a "core" with a purchase of a new/reman engine and go back into the pool of parts? I'm not sure I completely understand the testing process for reman engine parts to begin with... Yeah, the 'pedigree' of the parts has been something that's bothered me with a 'factory' overhaul. Honestly, I'd rather have my engine overhauled by a good shop and get as many of my parts back! At least I know their history. Quote
NickG Posted Monday at 11:01 PM Report Posted Monday at 11:01 PM Looks like a composite blade and not a single piece of forged aluminum. 1 Quote
Hank Posted Monday at 11:11 PM Report Posted Monday at 11:11 PM 7 minutes ago, NickG said: Looks like a composite blade and not a single piece of forged aluminum. Looks to me like an internal flaws in lone with the McCauley logo, you can see the darker color and smooth curved area. The darker part at the right edge is a typical break at 45°, from overstress. Quote
EricJ Posted Tuesday at 03:09 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 03:09 PM 20 hours ago, MikeOH said: I'm typically not one for 'overkill' solutions, but I'd NEVER trust that engine again, even after a complete overhaul. I can't imagine the over stress placed on EVERYTHING, engine cases included. I had an injector clog at full throttle just after takeoff and I thought the engine was going to come off the airplane it shook so hard. Four-cylinder motors aren't happy when a cylinder stops making power but still has full compression. I had to keep it at full throttle to maintain about 100 fpm climb to get around the pattern and land, so it did that for a lot more than a few seconds. I've put over 900 hours on it since then. 1 Quote
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