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General Aircraft
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REVIEW
PropBlurs
Merlin
Staff MemberSenior Editor
AEROSCALE
#017
_VISITCOMMUNITY
United Kingdom
Joined: June 11, 2003
KitMaker: 17,582 posts
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Posted: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 - 05:15 AM UTC
Tim Powell reviews highly innovative etched spinning propellers from Propblur.

Link to Item



If you have comments or questions please post them here.

Thanks!
Bink123
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Quebec, Canada
Joined: June 23, 2008
KitMaker: 414 posts
AeroScale: 364 posts
Posted: Thursday, October 20, 2011 - 03:59 AM UTC

I agree that this is a terrific idea, and looks pretty good.

However, I think that in real life, spinning props do not look that way. A photograph of a spinning prop where the camera shutter 'freezes' the propeller blades, does look like this.

PropBlur is pretty close to perfect but not quite.



Jessie_C
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British Columbia, Canada
Joined: September 03, 2009
KitMaker: 6,965 posts
AeroScale: 6,247 posts
Posted: Thursday, October 27, 2011 - 09:08 AM UTC

Quoted Text

I agree that this is a terrific idea, and looks pretty good.

However, I think that in real life, spinning props do not look that way. A photograph of a spinning prop where the camera shutter 'freezes' the propeller blades, does look like this.

PropBlur is pretty close to perfect but not quite.



My biggest beef with it is that each "blade" is pretty much identical. I feel that there should be some more randomness to the shapes, especially in the case of a multi-engined aircraft. The curves at the tips are also a bit too pronounced; they should be flatter, and the blade shafts a bit wider farther down.

Still, it looks far more dynamic than bare hubs
Magpie
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Queensland, Australia
Joined: July 10, 2011
KitMaker: 653 posts
AeroScale: 165 posts
Posted: Saturday, October 29, 2011 - 12:56 PM UTC
Maybe the can do a series of different types?

How the blades appear on a photo depends on the shutter speed.

High speeds will freeze the blades so it will look a slightly blurry normal prop, lower speeds will give the tip blurring look like we see on this example with the blurring reducing logarithmically towards the hub on quite low shutter speeds you'll get the blades looking bent as the faster moving tip takes longer to reflect enough light for the exposure.
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