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Stringfellow Propeller, Fixed-Pitch, Two-Blade, Wood and Fabric

Air and Space Museum

Object Details

Manufacturer

John Stringfellow

Physical Description

Type: Two-Blade, Fixed-Pitch, Wood and Fabric
Diameter: 88.9 cm (35 in.)
Chord: 27.9 cm (11 in.)
Engine Application: Stringfellow 0.75 kw (1 hp)

Summary

Like the Wright brothers, who followed, John Stringfellow and his associate William Henson are an important link to early aeronautical researchers. At an exposition in 1868 in London's Crystal Palace, where it powered a triplane model along a cable, the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain awarded a prize of £100 to Stringfellow’s engine as the lightest in proportion to its power, producing 0.75 kW (one horsepower) for the weight of 5.9 kg (13 pounds).
In 1889, Smithsonian Secretary Samuel P. Langley purchased the engine, along with a "car" designed to carry an engine and a pair of propellers, for £25, and donated it to the museum.
The propellers are fabric covered, having flat cross section blades with fairly extreme pitch and squared off ends. The blades are made of three 0.64 cm (¼-inch) wooden dowels passing through a solid 2.54 cm (one-inch) dowel hub, which formed part of a belt transmission system to the centrally mounted engine.

Credit Line

Museum purchase

Inventory Number

A18890003000

Restrictions & Rights

Usage conditions apply

Type

PROPULSION-Propellers & Impellers

Materials

Unidentified wood, Textile, Steel, Adhesive, Paint

Dimensions

Rotor/Propeller: 88.9 x 27.9 x 2.5 x 22.9 x 35cm (35 in. x 11 in. x 1 in. x 9 in. x 13 3/4 in.)
Other (Transmission Pulley): 3 3/4 x 1in. (9.5 x 2.5cm)

Country of Origin

United Kingdom

See more items in

National Air and Space Museum Collection

Data Source

National Air and Space Museum

Metadata Usage

Not determined

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv9d2407c70-100a-4628-a1f7-28c9f244426e

Record ID

nasm_A18890003000

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