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McCauley Propeller Systems is an American aircraft propeller manufacturer, founded in Dayton, Ohio in 1938 by Ernest G. McCauley. [1] At its peak, it was reportedly the world's largest aircraft propeller manufacturer, [ 2 ] or at least the largest manufacturer of general aviation propellers.
Ernest Gilbert McCauley (1889 – 1969) was an American aviation pioneer [1] [2] who in 1938 founded McCauley Aviation Corporation. [1] He began his career at the government's Propeller Research Department of the Airplane Design Section, Aviation Section of the Signal Corps based at McCook Field , Dayton, Ohio .
Haw Propeller - Germany; Helices E-PROPS - Electravia - France (2008–present) Hélices Halter - France (1987-2014) Hamilton Standard - United States (1929-1999) Hamilton Sundstrand - United States (1999-2012) Hartzell Propeller - United States (1917–present) Hegy Propellers - United States; Heine Propellers - Germany; Helix-Carbon - Germany ...
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Its 190-inch propeller diameter (4.7-metre) was smaller than the NK-12's 220–240 in (5.6–6.2 m) diameter, but it produced a power output of 21,007 hp (15,665 kW), delivering a takeoff thrust of 40,000 pounds-force (177 kilonewtons). [12] Even more powerful was the NK-62, which was in development throughout most of the decade.
Dangerous Flights is a documentary-style reality television show that airs on the Discovery Channel.The show follows the pilots of C.B. Aviation as they ferry light aircraft to their new owners across distances the aircraft weren't designed to fly and often over routes that are generally considered to be dangerous by the aviation community.
The closures included the new 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m 2) facility that was opened in August 2008 at a cost of US$25M, plus the McCauley Propeller Systems plant. These closures resulted in total job losses of 600 in Georgia. Some of the work was relocated to Cessna's Independence, Kansas, or Mexican facilities. [41]
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