spirals
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Discussion

BarnatosGhost

Original Poster:

32,559 posts

276 months

Wednesday 2nd June 2010
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quick one: what is the purpose of the spiral painted on the hub at the front of a jet engine?

FourWheelDrift

91,827 posts

307 months

Wednesday 2nd June 2010
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Hypnotises the runway into thinking the plane is taking off, we all know it needs a conveyor belt. wink

navier_stokes

948 posts

222 months

Wednesday 2nd June 2010
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1. So you know the fan is rotating.
2. To scare away birds.

There are obviously other better options for both of the above (e.g. engine noise is a more effective way of scaring birds away wink), but those are the two actual reasons.

Eric Mc

124,777 posts

288 months

Wednesday 2nd June 2010
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Serious answer - it signifies to a ramp worker that the engine is operating. Workers often wear ear defenders. There is always a lot of extraneous noise out on the ramp so it's not obvious what particular engines are actually running.

Spirals were also used by the Luftwaffe on their fighters during WW2 - for the same reason.



Simpo Two

91,257 posts

288 months

Wednesday 2nd June 2010
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Eric Mc said:
Spirals were also used by the Luftwaffe on their fighters during WW2 - for the same reason.
And we had yellow tips on the propellers - as I remember well from many Airfix models!

Eric Mc

124,777 posts

288 months

Wednesday 2nd June 2010
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Eric Mc said:
Spirals were also used by the Luftwaffe on their fighters during WW2 - for the same reason.
And we had yellow tips on the propellers - as I remember well from many Airfix models!
Which the Americans copied.

Prior to WW2, some USAAC and US Navy aircraft had red/yellow/blue tips.

In the 70s, an odd alternating black/white/black scheme was adopted by the RAF and showed up on their Chipmunks and Bulldogs,

BarnatosGhost

Original Poster:

32,559 posts

276 months

Thursday 3rd June 2010
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thanks chaps, suspected as much.