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Hand Proppping Airplane

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Uploaded by on Dec 28, 2007

Kris Allen Hand Propping Larry Allen's 1946 Luscombe. Kristopher Houston Allen. Beaumont, TX. Texas. Jefferson County.

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Howto & Style

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Standard YouTube License

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Uploader Comments (kallen2754)

  • is this plane a Luscombe?

  • @DrPilotRedC yes it is

Top Comments

  • Very good job. That IS the correct way to prop an engine. By putting your leg forward and then back as you swing the prop you throw your body weigh backward and out of the way. The wrong way is to stand there erect. You take the chance of losing your balance and falling forward...

    Ron

  • my Dad had a Luscombe when we were kids back in the 60's-I remember him spinning that ro like that, he would fly us over our house and around the San Jacinto monument-that lloks just like it, exept his was purple and white and it had wheel skirts, my Mom still has some pictures of it, I'll take them to kinko's and have them scanned and email them to you if you'd like, Dad died 5 years ago, I'm sure he would've loved to have seen this vid

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All Comments (14)

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  • jedi warrior

  • Leg swing not good...Standing behind prop and holding cowl is way safer and you can just step back. Also, if brakes fail and plane rolls forward you are out of the prop area.

  • when setting the prop always turn it backwards! the mag switch could short out and it could be on compression stoke and jolt! you never what could happen!

  • You look like you're standing too far from the prop. There's no need to kiss the thing, but leaning in like that is no good. You could fall back into the prop, esp. if it fires while your hands are on it, and your leg is in the air.

    Also, there's differing opinions on to leg-swing or not to leg-swing. I'm beginning to think that with impulse mags, there's no need to leg swing. The FAA "Airplane Flying Handbook" does not suggest that a leg swing is necessary:

  • I was thinking the same thing, cringing when he was pulling it through. He must really trust those P leads.

  • Well done, I think. :-)

  • There is absolutely no reason to stick your leg into the prop arc like that, it's a good way to loose it and standing on one foot = less balance

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