Tennessee Propellers

Tennessee Propellers, Inc, founded in 1981, is an American manufacturer of wooden propellers for homebuilt and ultralight aircraft. The company headquarters is located in Rising Fawn, Georgia.[1][2]

Tennessee Propellers
IndustryAerospace
Founded1981
Headquarters,
United States
ProductsAircraft propellers
Websitetn-prop.com

The company makes two-bladed propellers from maple laminates in diameters up to 72 in (1.83 m) for engines up to 100 hp (75 kW). The company is also the distributor for parts for the discontinued Japanese Zenoah G-25 and G-50 line of aircraft engines. In the early 2000s they also produced their own powered parachute design, the Scout, but the aircraft is now out of production.[1][3][4]

Aircraft

gollark: The speakers also work fine, as does WiFi, the keyboard, trackpad, etc.
gollark: Anecdotally, my device (2020 Legion 5 with the i5-10300H and RTX 2060) works fine under Linux. People spoke of backlight issues, but it works fine for me. I'm using the hybrid GPU mode with PRIME (https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PRIME#PRIME_render_offload).
gollark: Thanks. I'm not on Windows but might use this if I ever end up installing it instead for whatever reason.
gollark: I have an i5-10300H/RTX 2060 Legion 5, is undervolting possible? I've heard it said that you need some advanced BIOS options which this model lacks for some reason.
gollark: No.

See also

References

  1. Purdy, Don: AeroCrafter - Homebuilt Aircraft Sourcebook, page 85. BAI Communications. ISBN 0-9636409-4-1
  2. Tennessee Propellers (n.d.). "About Us". Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  3. Cliche, Andre: Ultralight Aircraft Shopper's Guide 8th Edition, page D-12. Cybair Limited Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-9680628-1-4
  4. Tennessee Propellers (n.d.). "Zenoah Engines". Retrieved 18 March 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.