PPRuNe Forums - View Single Post - Is it a 'thing' that Airbus produce helicopter rotor systems that rotate differently?
Old 11th Nov 2020, 03:55
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megan
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
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Confirming the Merlin and Griffon cranks rotated in opposite directions. The de Havilland Hornet had handed Merlins which was achieved by an idler gear in the prop reduction gear casing, done to reduce torque effects.

On the P-38 the engineering was some what different.To make a left hand engine from a right hand engine, you have to reverse the crankshaft, replace a regular gear with an "H" gear (this is a gear that skips over a gear that was used), and add a standard gear to reverse the prop rotation after you skip with the "H" gear. Every Allison engine has the ability to be reversed if you have an "H" gear and the added gear.

The right hand bank as viewed from the distributor end (rear of the engine) must have several spark plug leads interchanged because the cam lobes are backwards. It works out the same for the left-hand bank, somehow ... no left bank changes to the firing order

Basically, to make a left from a right, the engine must be almost disassembled because you must be able to get to the gear case in front and must split the case and disconnect all the rods to reverse the crankshaft.

However, if you are BUILDING a left or right from parts, the difference in build up is trivial, assuming you have an "H" gear, the new gear, and you know the plugs to interchange (this means rewiring the ignition harness on one side ... so it is MUCH easier to simply build a left or right wiring harness than it is to change one that is already wired).

The "H" gear:

A Standard gear is just a gear with a keyed center. An "H" gear looks like two standard gears joined by a small cylinder in the middle to skip over the gear that was formerly meshed by the standard gear. The new gear you add is to turn the skipped gear in the other direction. All gear cases have the ability to turn either way ... the gear bosses are in all of them, internally.

For both left and right engines, the cams turn the same direction and the crankshaft is reversed and turns backwards.

There is no other engine I know of from WWII that as so easy to make turn in either direction when being built up ... two gears, turn the crankshaft around, and change the right bank firing order ... that's it.
You need a starter that turns the other way, and you need an idler type gear to reverse the direction of the cam towers.

The reason for the prop rotation, and they tried all directions and combinations, was to reduce the pitching moment (trim change) power on/off so as to make a steadier gun platform.



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