Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
atomicstar wrote:thrust comes from the propeller.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:I can’t believe someone who I believe is a pilot started this thread. It’s been officially turbopropeller for 60+ years.
426Shadow wrote:Well respectfully, pilots just fly them, that doesn't mean they know more about them then say a mechanic or engineer.
spacecadet wrote:426Shadow wrote:Well respectfully, pilots just fly them, that doesn't mean they know more about them then say a mechanic or engineer.
Pilots are required to know every part of every system on the planes they're certified to fly. That is part of the type rating process. Prior to being type rated on a particular airplane, they would have learned general systems for all or other airplanes. You literally can't become a pilot without that knowledge; it is what every test and checkride is about.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:And they call themselves “pros”. We jusT don’t teach basics anymore. Heck, the written exams are out of a question bank, no education required.
GF
SierraPacific wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:And they call themselves “pros”. We jusT don’t teach basics anymore. Heck, the written exams are out of a question bank, no education required.
GF
I am completely ignorant of how it was done previously since that was well before my time but wasn't the written exam always a sort of formality before the real oral exam and flight portion (where you prove you know it)? They recently stopped releasing the test bank to prevent/limit the rote memorization even though there is quite a selection of services that help prepare for the written exam.
I know plenty of young guys (including myself) that try our absolute best to be as knowledgable as we can when it comes to knowledge of our aircraft.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:And they call themselves “pros”. We jusT don’t teach basics anymore. Heck, the written exams are out of a question bank, no education required.
GF
spacecadet wrote:426Shadow wrote:Well respectfully, pilots just fly them, that doesn't mean they know more about them then say a mechanic or engineer.
Pilots are required to know every part of every system on the planes they're certified to fly. That is part of the type rating process. Prior to being type rated on a particular airplane, they would have learned general systems for all or other airplanes. You literally can't become a pilot without that knowledge; it is what every test and checkride is about.
slcguy wrote:Here is an example from 1959 of an Eastern Lockheed (Prop-Jet) Electra.
An example of the previously mentioned Frontier Convair (Jet powered) 580 in 1964, look just ahead of the boarding door.
This trend didn't last long, people still saw propellers spinning out on the wings even if the airlines put the word jet on the planes. If using other terms didn't work then, doubt they will now.
Max Q wrote:slcguy wrote:Here is an example from 1959 of an Eastern Lockheed (Prop-Jet) Electra.
An example of the previously mentioned Frontier Convair (Jet powered) 580 in 1964, look just ahead of the boarding door.
This trend didn't last long, people still saw propellers spinning out on the wings even if the airlines put the word jet on the planes. If using other terms didn't work then, doubt they will now.
Exactly, in that era airline management realized the value in highlighting that these new aircraft may have propellers but they were turbine powered
In other words this is ‘not your dad’s DC 7’
Whoever dreamed up the term ‘turboprop’ did these manufacturers a disservice
Max Q wrote:Always thought this was a poor and inaccurate way to categorize these aircraft
the title is very misleading, propellers mean piston engines to most people and passengers
Finally it sells the aircraft short, I think the name ‘turboprop’ should be retired and replaced with ‘jet prop’ or ‘prop jet’
I think passengers would be more receptive to flying on aircraft so named as well
Turboprop is a poor name, time for it to go
SierraPacific wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:And they call themselves “pros”. We jusT don’t teach basics anymore. Heck, the written exams are out of a question bank, no education required.
GF
I am completely ignorant of how it was done previously since that was well before my time but wasn't the written exam always a sort of formality before the real oral exam and flight portion (where you prove you know it)? They recently stopped releasing the test bank to prevent/limit the rote memorization even though there is quite a selection of services that help prepare for the written exam.
I know plenty of young guys (including myself) that try our absolute best to be as knowledgable as we can when it comes to knowledge of our aircraft.
Max Q wrote:Always thought this was a poor and inaccurate way to categorize these aircraft
Many people assume this is a description of a ‘turbocharged propeller’ aircraft and why wouldn’t they ? the title is very misleading, propellers mean piston engines to most people and passengers
Hollywood doesn’t help, how many times have you seen a King Air start up with an accompanying piston engine sound effect ?!
Refueling personnel are often confused, thinking it has props so it must use Avgas although this is a survivable mistake unlike putting jet fuel in a piston aircraft which may not be
Finally it sells the aircraft short, I think the name ‘turboprop’ should be retired and replaced with ‘jet prop’ or ‘prop jet’
That is an accurate description of the power plant, a jet turbine driving a propeller through a reduction gearbox
I think passengers would be more receptive to flying on aircraft so named as well
Turboprop is a poor name, time for it to go
Starlionblue wrote:Max Q wrote:slcguy wrote:Here is an example from 1959 of an Eastern Lockheed (Prop-Jet) Electra.
An example of the previously mentioned Frontier Convair (Jet powered) 580 in 1964, look just ahead of the boarding door.
This trend didn't last long, people still saw propellers spinning out on the wings even if the airlines put the word jet on the planes. If using other terms didn't work then, doubt they will now.
Exactly, in that era airline management realized the value in highlighting that these new aircraft may have propellers but they were turbine powered
In other words this is ‘not your dad’s DC 7’
Whoever dreamed up the term ‘turboprop’ did these manufacturers a disservice
I don't know if it goes that deep. Certainly many people will see a pair of propellers and think the plane is "old" even though it is a brand new state of the art turboprop with FADEC and EFIS up the kazoo. The turboprop nomenclature is in most cases completely unknown to them. Perhaps apart from the fact that there is a "prop" in there somewhere.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:Outside the pedantic world of A.net, its a jet IF doesn’t have propellers. My F/E certificate says “turbojet powered “.
VSMUT wrote:atomicstar wrote:thrust comes from the propeller.
*Power
kurtverbose wrote:You can't get a turbocharged propeller.
VSMUT wrote:Rebranding is not the way forward to improve passenger perception of propellers. That's just nonsense. People are afraid of the propellers when they see them during boarding, not the tiny little "AT72" or "Q400" moniker listed during the booking process.
You would be far better off by showing the passengers that they really aren't old WWII era planes that are bound to crash at any moment. I'm thinking something like writing the year of manufacture next to the boarding door and on the safety cards. My own experience is that most of the passengers that complain see a brand new ATR pull up, and they would much rather be on a 30 year old 737 classic, because "jets are newer".
Starlionblue wrote:This seems to me a North American thing, with a relatively simple written exam, and just one exam. In EASA, Australia, South Africa and other places, the fourteen-ish CPL/ATPL exams take at least 6 months of full-time study to prepare for, including proper ground school.
citationjet wrote:'.
Regardless of what they are called, the general public will still view these propeller aircraft as a noisy, slow flying, low flying, and vibrating experience.
kurtverbose wrote:Like you, I wasn't there, and whilst I would like to believe everybody here on a.net knows the difference, my understanding is that a supercharger uses a mechanical drive from the engine (or sometimes from a secondary engine), whereas a turbocharger utilises "free" energy from exhaust gases to drive a turbine that in turn allows you to drive a compressor.When all these names came out (1940's to 1960's) the name turbocharger wasn't really used by the general public or by the aviation community. Internal combustion engines which were turbocharged were called supercharged - with the compressor driven by an exhaust driven turbine (quite a mouthful). This might be just from a British point of view, but that's the nomenclature I read in contemporary books - e.g. by Stanley Hooker. I think the early American nomenclature was turbo-supercharged.
Ouch! I'm not 100% sure I agree with the noisy/quiet part.As for the ignorance of the traveling public, they just know props are slow and noisy and jets are fast and quiet. Apart from trips over short distances, both these things are true.
SheikhDjibouti wrote:How many of "the general public" have any actual experience of propeller driven aircraft these days? Many of them have only ever flown by jet. Or in a Cessna 172. They might possibly figure that propeller = slower, but why would they add the other criticisms? Noisy? When would they have come across anything bigger (& noisier) than a Cessna 402?
SheikhDjibouti wrote:Low flying? Wouldn't most people figure simply that GA fly low, airliners fly higher.
SheikhDjibouti wrote:Vibrating? Even those with a degree in mechanical engineering might assume that if their car runs nice & smooth with a 6-cylinder engine instead a 4-pot, then a big old aircraft engine with 32-cylinders must be like surfing on whipped cream. The fact that reciprocating engines are simply no longer used on airliners is not even part of their equation. So why assume vibration is an issue that they consider?
SheikhDjibouti wrote:Nevertheless, I can believe that many have a bias against propellers, without them actually being able to explain why. Perhaps it is simply fear of the unknown?
SheikhDjibouti wrote:How many of "the general public" have any actual experience of propeller driven aircraft these days? Many of them have only ever flown by jet. Or in a Cessna 172. They might possibly figure that propeller = slower, but why would they add the other criticisms? When would they have come across anything bigger (& noisier) than a Cessna 402?
citationjet wrote:Pleased to meet you; I regret my own c.v. is far less impressive so I don't doubt you have more knowledge on this subject than myself.I have a degree in mechanical engineering, and retired from Cessna Aircraft as Executive Engineer.
An all too familiar story. Thirty years ago the memories of reciprocating engine airliners were still fresh enough to be an issue for some, even though the Saab & ATR replacements were totally different state-of-the-art turboprops.In the late 80s AA dropped all jet service (727-200s) in ICT, and replaced it with Saab 340s, and ATR 72s. The customers did not like the change.
Strange - on FR24 I can find Dash8s cruising at FL240, and occasionally bumped up to FL250 (the service ceiling for most in this class). I don't necessarily see this as a big difference, but I simply cannot allow your data to stand unchallenged. Sorry!I just checked flightaware for current cruise altitudes of various turboprops (ATR72, Dash 8, and Q400) today. The highest cruise altitudes I could find were less than 20,000 ft. The smallest commuter jets (ie CRJ-200) typically fly about 32,000 ft.
I wrote:Vibrating? Even those with a degree in mechanical engineering might assume that if their car runs nice & smooth with a 6-cylinder engine instead a 4-pot, then a big old aircraft engine with 32-cylinders must be like surfing on whipped cream. The fact that reciprocating engines are simply no longer used on airliners is not even part of their equation. So why assume vibration is an issue that they consider?
you wrote:I have a degree in mechanical engineering, and ….
The issue is not the engine itself, it is the shock waves coming off the tips of the propellers that generate the vibration in the structure.
I wrote:Nevertheless, I can believe that many have a bias against propellers, without them actually being able to explain why.
you wrote:For the customer, perception is reality.
spacecadet wrote:426Shadow wrote:Well respectfully, pilots just fly them, that doesn't mean they know more about them then say a mechanic or engineer.
Pilots are required to know every part of every system on the planes they're certified to fly. That is part of the type rating process. Prior to being type rated on a particular airplane, they would have learned general systems for all or other airplanes. You literally can't become a pilot without that knowledge; it is what every test and checkride is about.
SheikhDjibouti wrote:What is most telling from FR24 today is that earlier today, whilst there were 40+ ATR-72s in the air over Europe, another 110+ over Asia, 30+ over Australia & NZ, and 35 over Central and South America, when it came to North America, there were NONE! That pretty much tells you all you need to know.
citationjet wrote:SheikhDjibouti wrote:What is most telling from FR24 today is that earlier today, whilst there were 40+ ATR-72s in the air over Europe, another 110+ over Asia, 30+ over Australia & NZ, and 35 over Central and South America, when it came to North America, there were NONE! That pretty much tells you all you need to know.
Of the 106 de Havilland Dash 8-400s currently flying, more than 60 of them are currently flying over the US and Canada.
nmcalba wrote:I had a quick search through the archives of Flight magazine to see when the term turbo-prop was first used.
The first reference I could find was from Dec 1946 - which talks about the "The Hadley Page Hermes with four Bristol Theseus turbo-props"
There were quite a few references to turboprops before that - dating back to 1944, but they were referred to as "Turbine/Airscrews" in contrast to "Turbine/Jets".
There is even a reference in a Feb 1945 article describing the various possibilities of jet engines of what we now call a turbo-fan - although there it was called a "Turbine with augmenter".
I was quite surprised to see the amount of detailed discussion going on about jet engines, given that this was being published in wartime.
Interestingly the Feb 45 article by Air Commodore Banks entitled "Turbines or piston engines" has the prescient comment by the Air Cmdr about jet engines: "It will, in my opinion, be so competitive in 5 or 10 years time that the large piston engine may not survive, and the smaller piston engine will have a hard time to exist also". It is quite odd however given, the sophistication of modern jet engines, to see one of the main advantages of jet engines being given as "the speed at which it can be evolved ....... even the more complex turbine types and those having airscrews should only take about half the time of the equivalent piston engine to develop"
superbizzy73 wrote:To the original post...if you put AvGas in a turboprop (yep, staying with that name), then you’re fired...
SheikhDjibouti wrote:Like you, I wasn't there, and whilst I would like to believe everybody here on a.net knows the difference, my understanding is that a supercharger uses a mechanical drive from the engine (or sometimes from a secondary engine), whereas a turbocharger utilises "free" energy from exhaust gases to drive a turbine that in turn allows you to drive a compressor.
SheikhDjibouti wrote:As to Stanley Hooker's contribution, the Rolls Royce (& Packard) Merlin engines were always known as supercharged, because that is exactly what they were - i.e. a compressor driven by a mechanical linkage. The two-stage supercharger on later models of the Spitfire absorbed something like 250hp directly from the engine crankshaft, which I find staggering. Even better, I recall that the supercharged Merlin would only deliver an extra 250hp at low level, meaning that it was a zero-sum equation.The real benefit only came into play at higher altitudes....
(no, I cannot find that reference at this point in time - sorry)
SheikhDjibouti wrote:Ouch! I'm not 100% sure I agree with the noisy/quiet part.
And you will have to define "short distances" in terms of whether you are addressing a European, an American, or in the worst case, an Australian.
VSMUT wrote:Turbine powered propeller, turbine-propeller, turboprop. I don't see the issue at all.
Jet is incorrect, there is no meaningful jet of air coming out of a turboprop. The thing a jet (turbojet and turbofan) have in common with the turboprop is the turbine, not the jet.
pickafivestring wrote:VSMUT wrote:Turbine powered propeller, turbine-propeller, turboprop. I don't see the issue at all.
Jet is incorrect, there is no meaningful jet of air coming out of a turboprop. The thing a jet (turbojet and turbofan) have in common with the turboprop is the turbine, not the jet.
Disagree. There is enough residual thrust from the exhaust, that the performance tables take it into account in the POH. At high speeds it can approach 10% in extreme cases, but is usually less.
kurtverbose wrote:Excuse me?...all you have to do (as I stated) is read the contemporary documentation, which you seem not to have done.
SheikhDjibouti wrote:So, many thanks for that slap around the face, but as I was agreeing with you I'm not sure what I did to deserve it.Historically it was superchargers that were more commonly known to the general public...
….the Allison V-1710... started out with a single stage supercharger, but was also developed with a turbocharger (or turbo-supercharger in the nomenclature of the day)
kurtverbose wrote:Yes, I never had a problem with that.And yes, that is the modern definition, but as explained, it wasn't the initial one - they were both forms of supercharging - which by initial definition just means forced induction.
kurtverbose wrote:When all these names came out (1940's to 1960's) the name turbocharger wasn't really used by the general public or by the aviation community.
VSMUT wrote:pickafivestring wrote:VSMUT wrote:Jet is incorrect, there is no meaningful jet of air coming out of a turboprop.
Disagree. There is enough residual thrust from the exhaust, that the performance tables take it into account in the POH. At high speeds it can approach 10% in extreme cases, but is usually less.
It is something like 50 kg of thrust on the ATR. Not even enough to get it rolling with brakes released.
Wikipedia wrote:Bristol Britannia; Bristol Proteus engine
Maximum power output: 3,320 shp (2,475 kW) + 1,200 lb (5.33 kN) residual thrust giving 3,780 eshp
SheikhDjibouti wrote:VSMUT wrote:pickafivestring wrote:Disagree. There is enough residual thrust from the exhaust, that the performance tables take it into account in the POH. At high speeds it can approach 10% in extreme cases, but is usually less.
It is something like 50 kg of thrust on the ATR. Not even enough to get it rolling with brakes released.
Whilst I respect your expertise in many things relating to ATRs and Dash-8s, there were other turboprop powered airliners before them.Wikipedia wrote:Bristol Britannia; Bristol Proteus engine
Maximum power output: 3,320 shp (2,475 kW) + 1,200 lb (5.33 kN) residual thrust giving 3,780 eshp
That's 13.8% residual thrust.
Back when I was young, "eshp" was a recognised term, but it doesn't seem to feature so much these days. Maybe modern turboprop engines are so fabulously efficient it is negligible as you say.![]()
EDIT - I have found a figure for the PW150.... and I'll leave it there.