For those that asked...
McCauley 2-bladed constant speed. Bog-standard Cessna 182 type.
Questions for the group:
When they start to leak, what and where do you usually see that? Not sure if I've seen that.
I also *assume* that if you're doing engine oil analysis that if you've got something severely wrong in the hub, you might get warning of that via metal in the oil, or would the forces involved mean it comes apart badly long before that? Just curious.
Any screens there or something that would attempt to keep that out of the engine, just as an afterthought question. I think not, but don't know.
Just learning a little Prop Maintenance 101 here.
Not something you usually get trained on during PP-ASEL bookwork, ya know?
(There's a lot of stuff like that, actually. The CPA systems course fills in a lot of holes... Highly recommend it as a "primer" on MX issues. It's not worth much for pilot technique however. I always joke they're really the Cessna Mechanics Assn. Nothing wrong with that... Mechanics run the place. The "Legacy" 182 course was well-worth the price.)
We're coming due on the calendar months with around 400 hours on it. It was overhauled to zero time by Rocky Mountain Propeller roughly six years ago. (Prior to us owning the aircraft.)
Right now it has some roughness on the leading edge (yeah, I've read the FAA guidance for A&Ps on how they dress them, remove dings, etc... fascinating stuff actually, the distances from a major ding that has to be removed and shaped and the forces involved), and it was repainted and dressed at last year's Annual. We fly off of grass/dirt a few times a year so once in a while it gets tiny pits.
I flew in some rain this summer and I'm pretty sure that's what took the leading edge paint off it again. Cleans the airplane itself up pretty well, but trashes the paint on the prop.
Much of the reading I've done indicates that some of the reason for the calendar month limitation is to check for corrosion. We don't see much in the way of corrosion here on anything really, too dry. There's plenty of well maintained 1970s cars running around here as collector's items that have never had any major body panels replaced or bondo'd or anything like that.
Our government decided to start putting magnesium chloride on roads in winter some time ago (apparently they get the stuff from Utah) and it's good at eating otherwise fine vehicles and sticks to everything bad, but not used at airports. Stuff is awful to get off a car.
Our rubber and plastic parts suffer in the dry air though... especially mixed with the higher UV sun here at altitude if the bird is outdoors... Trade-offs...
We're hangared so those UV rays haven't done much destruction.
Any other thoughts on constant speed props appreciated.