Just a quick one gents. I was just looking at the painting diagrams for my Dakota builds and it got me thinking about the yellow tips on propellers. Was this a safety feature added to help ground crews who would know the engine(s) were running but to clearly identify the extremities of the prop blades?
Propellers
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I believe so..... Still didn't stop people walking into them sadly.
Have a book by a Fleet Airm pilot who learnt to fly in the US under their training scheme... Ended up flying Corsairs in the Pacific....IIRC he had just landed whilst on a training flight in the US.... His mate was walking around his own plane for reasons I can't recall and walked into the blades with the inevitable result. :disappointed2:Comment
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Guest
They are, yes. Not ever country did this, and not all that did, used yellow tips, nor did everyone apply a distinguishing colour to both sides of the blade. For example, Dutch military aircraft until 1940 had red/white/blue stripes at the propeller tips but on the front only, so you got a circular national flag when the propeller was spinning.Comment
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I imagine while pretty easy to work out with a single aircraft a squadron scramble would be a noisy chaotic experience.Comment
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Incidentally most of those yellow tips were four inches long, which equates to around two mil in 1/48.Comment
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