marine air wrote:
Remember the P-51 racer "Precious Metal"? it once had a spinner that was 24 carat gold plated. It had to be replaced as the Whittington brothers couldn't get the prop to balance and it had severe vibrations at high power settings.
See, I never really bought the excuse for this. When Ralph Payne built that airplane up for Gary Levitz they decided to make that special spinner. It was not gold plated...it was actually 24K gold leaf that was rubbed on by hand. They found that the first time they ran it in the rain, it started coming off.
HOWEVER.
Gary raced that plane three times (Mojave 75, Reno 75, and Mojave 76) with that gold leaf spinner, and both Gary and Ralph did some serious testing of that plane in the spring of '76 at some serious power-settings for long periods of time...and not once did either one of them detect any kind of vibration that were out of the normal for a Merlin running at around 100 inches of Manifold Pressure.
They sold the plane to Don in July of '76 and ran it at Reno that fall at record speeds...with that gold spinner.
It wasn't until the following year, when the Brothers started doing their 'own stuff' to Precious Metal, that the story of the 'out of balance spinner' came to the surface.
Also remember, the 'race' prop they were using was a very, very thin profile 'experimental' Hamilton Standard blade, developed as part of the H-model test program. There were two sets made. One set was installed on the Beguine and destroyed in the crash at Cleveland in 1949. The other set was used by Joe DeBona on Thunderbird when he won the Bendix in 49. I've heard stories that the blades were so thin that during power run-ups on the ground, the blades would bend forward to the point that 'sponsor' Jimmy Stewart couldn't watch.
Ralph bought those blades and installed them on Precious Metal.
Other people have claimed that they were Northstar blades, or something of the sort similar to what Miss Candace/Jeannie ran in the 70's and 80's, but these were truly two-of-a-kind props...and the only one left of the pair.
That prop, of course, was destroyed when it was taxied into the back of a Datsun at Reno 77.
I tend to believe that, given my discussions with the primaries involved in building the plane, the vibrations may have had more to do with that prop and it's idiosyncracies that nobody else had 'felt' before than a layer of gold leaf on a spinner.
But hey...I wasn't there, wasn't flying it..and have no idea what kind of 'vibration' Don felt. All I know was when I asked Ralph about the spinner causing a vibration, his comment was "bullsh*t!"
Brad