muddyboots wrote:
Does some airplane designer sit at his desk, fiddling with his etchings, and decide that two blades isn't enough? Three blades looks better, yeah. So I'll put em on this spitfire because the two blades was dumb looking. And then an anvil hits him on the head nine months later...and his assitant, who was always in favor of the four blade asthetic, goes for that nicely even number of blades. Then he manages to get some nightscap in his tea by mistake, and his replacement goes for six?
Gee, you cracked the big secret first go! You only missed that they decided that they'd been going the wrong way all these years, and reversed the prop direction halfway through the development!
Spitfires (Hurricanes et al)...
The two blade wooden prop was an interim compromise until Britain had production of the new constant speed or variable pitch props. Like a bike with one gear, the wood two blade 'Watts' type prop was a compromise between take-off, cruise and full speed power conversion to thrust. It's easier when making a all-wood prop (i.e. without a metal hub) to make a two or four (two- twos bolted together) blade unit.
The three-bladers were the ideal for that level of performance, and required plumbing into the engine's oil system to change the pitch. These came in wooden (Jablo) blades and metal - each socketed into metal blade-root units that allowed variable pitch angles to be set by the hub. A four blade prop was a natural progression (simplistically) to take advantage of increased engine power over the three.
The five blade prop was fitted to the still more powerful Griffon engine (which turned the other way to the Merlin, incidentally) and five blades was a good way of absorbing and converting that power
within a limited ground clearance. The six blade props were two-three blade cotraprops, to remove the significant torque effect of the five blade effort. (The oddity was the wide-chord four-blade props used on Griffon Spits and Seafires, which was a better compromise for the low level environment they were intended to excell in - see Spitfire Mk.XII and Seafire 17.)
A quick and dirty answer, I'm sure major inaccuracies will be corrected.
Regards,