You might try a piece of sandpaper between the propeller and the spinner backplate.For similar spinners I made it tool that is essentially an open-front spinner, such that you can tighten down the tool to hold the propeller in the right place, then tighten the propeller, then take the tool off and put the real spinner on in the same place.
For similar spinners I made it tool that is essentially an open-front spinner, such that you can tighten down the tool to hold the propeller in the right place, then tighten the propeller, then take the tool off and put the real spinner on in the same place.
Why didn't I think of that? The Great Planes spinner is $9.95 -- that's not too much to pay for such a tool, especially when you get a spare backplate to boot.
Although marking the back plate with a pencil mark at the TE of the prop works wonders as well.
I have a OS.46LA that likes to knock the nut loose with the all-too-occasional backfire.For my own sanity, it may be worth it to sacrifice a spinner.Although marking the back plate with a pencil mark at the TE of the prop works wonders as well.R,Chris
Well, I don't have a printer. Don't have a ratted spinner. Hmmmmm.First, I will try a sandpaper washer. Then, ..... well, I'll try other suggestions.
I was about to ask, who the heck doesn't have a ratted spinner. But now I know.
Well, 220 sandpaper held through 3 flights.We'll see how the next outing goes.Thanks for all input!
For Chris Behm:I have an LA-46 that loves to backfire! Not sure what the deal is, there seem to be ones that like to back fire and then some of my flying buddies have LA-46s that rarely backfire (but when they do, it's usually at a contest!!)Procedure: choke the engine with 4 snappy flips counter-clockwise, then flip it through another 5 times CCW. Attach battery to glow-plug and then pull the prop through by hand clockwise to feel a bump. Now, flip the prop clockwise and she starts right up.Anytime that the battery is on the glowplug and the prop is pulled through counter-clockwise, she'll backfire and blow the prop loose.
Chris;The closest I can get to you in LA is Barstow. That is unless I visit other family members down in South El Monte or South San Gabriel.Carl C
This is interesting to the point of being weird. You do realize that when you flip the prop clockwise it backfires to start. I guess the backfire in that direction tightens the nut instead of loosening it! Probably should use left hand threads on cranks!
Off-topic, but for the first time ever, this last weekend in Tucson, I got a backfire during burping (when it was 30-something degrees) and while my prop nut stayed on, it burned a hole in my nylons. I hadn't ever heard of that happening but I was staring right at it when it melted. Brett
uhhhhhhhh......You wear nylons.........?
Nurse grade?
It just won't be the same old Brett anymore....
I think we have all gotten pretty tired of the original at this point. Brett