Making a WOODEN Airplane Propeller!

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 955

  • @xylafoxlin
    @xylafoxlin  Год назад +45

    👟 Check out Vessi’s Memorial Day sale and Vessi styles at www.vessi.com/XYLAFOXLIN. If you missed the sale, Use code XYLAFOXLIN for 15% off your order. Free shipping for CA, US, AU, JP, TW, KR, SGP.
    FOLLOW CULVER PROPS! Alaina is truly one of the best humans I've had the honor of working with, and I really hope this video does her and her work justice.
    RUclips: www.youtube.com/@CulverProps
    Instagram: instagram.com/culver_props/

    • @Chr.U.Cas1622
      @Chr.U.Cas1622 Год назад

      Dear Misses Foxlin.
      I'm concerned so please don't get me wrong. You look way too skinny. I can see in your face that you do not weigh enough. I absolutely adored Karen Carpenter. She was an unbeliiiievably good singer and musician. But please let her not be a role model in case of your body. Thanks in advance for considering.
      Best regards, luck and health in particular.

    • @KernelLeak
      @KernelLeak Год назад +2

      Shouldn't this post be pinned?

    • @nickwulf
      @nickwulf Год назад +1

      Electro-Swing playlist music.ruclips.net/p/PLHL-v28H0MXxwZ-mrr8IIjuB7HaA4mTKs&feature=share

    • @briankane3905
      @briankane3905 Год назад

      Way too cool to see a young lady just making her dreams come true with a lot of hard work!!

    • @banglintah9500
      @banglintah9500 Год назад

      Hi, can you sand it please? I want to buy it. And how much money for one pcs? Am from indonesia..

  • @scottmanley
    @scottmanley Год назад +882

    This is fantastic, loving seeing the whole process. It's a long way from anything I fly.

    • @SuperLuminalMan
      @SuperLuminalMan Год назад +51

      The Manley, the myth, the legend!

    • @sebdapleb1523
      @sebdapleb1523 Год назад +37

      Bro taught me orbital mechanics 😭

    • @I-0-0-I
      @I-0-0-I Год назад +11

      Hi Scott! Yesterday the NSF stream, today a Xyla video... Is there really only one of you?
      Q: If you could make a decent GPTClone of yourself, would you unleash it on the internet?

    • @johnnybigpotato2404
      @johnnybigpotato2404 Год назад +7

      LOL. Watch your stuff all the time bro. Glad to see you here. :)

    • @steveskouson9620
      @steveskouson9620 Год назад +15

      Xyla, book this guy.
      steve

  • @TheBookDoctor
    @TheBookDoctor Год назад +637

    That copy-lathe is the coolest machine I've seen in a long, long time.

    • @ALexP-bh5fx
      @ALexP-bh5fx Год назад +12

      Great idea! Simple as a penny - but so easy to use!

    • @victorip7632
      @victorip7632 Год назад +12

      I wonder how were the propeller made before that machine ever made 😅

    • @Yewtewba
      @Yewtewba Год назад +27

      ​@@victorip7632I think slowly is the keyword

    • @banaana1234
      @banaana1234 Год назад +19

      @@Yewtewba But also by the time propellers were being made in numbers that sort of machine would have already existed.

    • @Yewtewba
      @Yewtewba Год назад +5

      @@banaana1234 apparently the first was 1820. So yeah I guess so

  • @mattmays9063
    @mattmays9063 Год назад +308

    I love Xyla's ability to create such a focus on the "guest" of her collabs in such an organic way; Despite it being Xyla's channel, she's not hesitant to showcase selflessly the "guest" star. What a tremendously wholesome character trait. Bless you, Xyla!

    • @jonadams8841
      @jonadams8841 Год назад +12

      That’s one of the things that makes Xyla so special

  • @AlbertaGeek
    @AlbertaGeek Год назад +354

    Maybe I don't get out enough, but that lathe is just about the coolest thing I've ever seen.

    • @DigitalPetrol
      @DigitalPetrol Год назад +24

      I had to stop the video and show my wife. She thought it was cool and she's not a geek like me.

    • @wgm-en2gx
      @wgm-en2gx Год назад +6

      It was definitely very cool.

    • @KJ6EAD
      @KJ6EAD Год назад +3

      It's called a duplicator lathe.

    • @AlbertaGeek
      @AlbertaGeek Год назад +1

      @@KJ6EAD Thanks. It reminds me of the "Sketch-a-Graph" device I had many years ago. Same principle, really.

    • @orbitutmost
      @orbitutmost Год назад +1

      same, what an incredible low-tech solution

  • @WarningHPB
    @WarningHPB Год назад +133

    Xyla staring into your soul while sanding

    • @tompw3141
      @tompw3141 Год назад +8

      She's been taking lessons from @Lord_Vinheteiro

    • @Priapos93
      @Priapos93 Год назад +1

      Really? I figured she was making weird mouth shapes behind the ventilator

    • @anon_y_mousse
      @anon_y_mousse Год назад +1

      Nah, it was a silent cry for help. She was practically pleading to be rescued.

    • @888johnmac
      @888johnmac Год назад +1

      @@anon_y_mousse ... lol , i can guess how many hours of sanding there were

    • @bruceleenstra6181
      @bruceleenstra6181 Год назад +3

      Xyla has perfected Zombie Sanding

  • @rpanda_old
    @rpanda_old Год назад +7

    Safety wires on the propelor screws and the copy lathe machine are so simple yet genius ideas. Wow imagine how many cool genius inventions we have in this world around us that go unnoticed.

    • @alonespirit9923
      @alonespirit9923 Год назад +1

      That's a good point about being unnoticed.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 8 месяцев назад

      I work with presses everyday so to me they're nothing special but then someone shows off a press in a video or someone ask me about work and it's like alien technology to people who've never set foot in a press shop. I do still find it interesting learning about machines I've not worked with, new or old.

  • @FredMcIntyre
    @FredMcIntyre Год назад +88

    Props Xyla! 👍🏻👊🏻

    • @Priapos93
      @Priapos93 Год назад +5

      Underrated comment

    • @lauxmyth
      @lauxmyth Год назад +1

      I see what you did there.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 8 месяцев назад

      Took me a second.

  • @bulletproofpepper2
    @bulletproofpepper2 Год назад +4

    Great work. I love the quote from Alaina “we are ether going to make a beautiful propeller or Great Wall art”. thanks for sharing.

  • @toshn4151
    @toshn4151 Год назад +64

    The propeller lathe is absolutely insane!! 🤯 It's like a steam punk 3d printer. Another fantastic video.

    • @mathewritchie
      @mathewritchie Год назад +3

      It looks like a desendant of a machine I saw in a video showing the harpers ferrey gun factory musium and used to carve rifle stocks.

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper Год назад +1

    I made a display prop for my hangar in the same exact manner using my amateur rendition of Jablo densified wood with Douglas fir, then hand formed brass leading edge protectors and soldered them in. There's a local guy with a prop lathe that let me borrow it, and while it does so much of the hard work for you, there's still a ton of work left to do. It's another example of 90% complete with 90% left to do. For anyone doubting the resilience of wood as a prop material in the modern world, MT Propeller is still using wood cores for their high performance composite blades, and a lot of the top tier British WWII fighters used Jablo/Rotol wood props. We started our journey into the skies with wood props, and they're still just as effective today.

  • @MyAvitech
    @MyAvitech Год назад +18

    Been watching Alaina for years, ever since the Experimental Aircraft Channel made a video highlighting what she does.
    As an A&P myself, I can say that what she does is Masterclass workmanship. I've even seen a few of her props out in the wild on a couple occasions. I love that she makes each one custom by hand for the aircraft, and it's not just some mass produced prop, churned out on a CnC.

  • @georgegilbert7347
    @georgegilbert7347 Год назад +120

    Alaina's daughter appeared to be a skilled shop assistant in her own right. Somehow I got the feeling that the daughter was carefully watching the amateur, Xyla, to make sure she did not mess up.

    • @alonespirit9923
      @alonespirit9923 Год назад +9

      Quite likely! 🔎

    • @shubinternet
      @shubinternet Год назад +31

      I remember in high school working with my dad in his scene shop at the University, where he taught stagecraft. I sometimes wondered why he asked me to do certain things instead of his grad students. Years later, when I actually asked my dad that question, he told me that it was because I had more experience than they did, and he was confident that I would do the job right, and the way he wanted.
      In hindsight, that was a great bonding experience, although I don't think I appreciated it at the time.

    • @alonespirit9923
      @alonespirit9923 Год назад +4

      @@shubinternet That is both a valuable event and a valuable memory.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +5

      The kid is the one who's _really_ in charge.

    • @alexlail7481
      @alexlail7481 Год назад +7

      @@alonespirit9923 I think that is sadly something that has been more or less lost currently in our society. For generations community elders or parents in general would teach the next generation the skills of their trade or even everyday life skills in the process both groups learned respect for the other and the next generation acquired a certain level of responsibility and self sufficiency that can be lacking today. RUclips and the skills on offer are great but the self-sufficiency, responsibility, and intergenerational respect are not as easily developed without the more personal interaction of the past. Hopefully society as a whole can figure out how to restore something equally beneficial in the future.

  • @excrubulent
    @excrubulent Год назад +15

    I love this mix of technical precision with organic woodworking craft. I would love to understand how the original prop templates were made! Also something about watching you fill in those stamped numbers with pencil was just deeply satisfying.

    • @sarowie
      @sarowie Год назад +4

      it is almost funny to see how the process jumps from crafting, to machining back to using a hammer to stamp in the numbers and filling it by hand. It is well: signing of the work making it "official", so the most "hands on" part is the most sacred part of the process as it confirms with the makers knowledge, experience and judgment that this is now a propeller.

    • @Jasper_4444
      @Jasper_4444 Год назад

      That's a fascinating question about how the templates were made. My guess is they were carefully handcrafted, with measurements being taken at every moment.

  • @victorip7632
    @victorip7632 Год назад +1

    What a fascinating process, I wonder how the first propeller ever made without the guide and that machine which help making the propeller profile. Crazy engineering and craftsmanship.

  • @Hobartthedolphinboy
    @Hobartthedolphinboy Год назад +43

    That lathe is so cool!

  • @kouji71
    @kouji71 Год назад +2

    This might be one of my favorite videos. from the wood working shop to the brilliant lathe (seriously, so cool!) to the scratch made plane the whole thing just kept getting better the longer I watched.

  • @wxmanthunder
    @wxmanthunder Год назад +6

    This. This is why I love RUclips (and your channel). I've had my license for nearly 30 years and somehow have never seen the process of making a wood prop. Thanks for this!

  • @brianlhughes
    @brianlhughes Год назад +14

    the lathe which copies the blank is genius!

  • @simonabunker
    @simonabunker Год назад +7

    Woodworking and aviation - the perfect combination for the channel!

  • @chrissugg968
    @chrissugg968 Год назад +11

    That lathe is incredible, the way it uses the top piece as a guide to carve the bottom piece.

  • @T3RRY_T3RR0R
    @T3RRY_T3RR0R Год назад +14

    17 years of highly tuned muscle memory. Can't beat craftsmanship like that.

  • @Poundy
    @Poundy Год назад +1

    well, that was *fantastic*. Thank you for showing us such a great business that puts their heart and soul into continuing such a great tradition. Can't get better than old-school woodworking tools making a prop !

  • @olsonspeed
    @olsonspeed Год назад +10

    Good to see Culver Props is still doing well and training the next generation of craftsperson. Thanks for the great content, it is always a good day when Xyla drops a new video!

  • @LtBRS
    @LtBRS Год назад +1

    Absolutely "wonkedy" is a word! The lathe reminds me of the mechanical functioning beauty of a 1860(ish) barrel riffing lathe. 😊

  • @gregburch1598
    @gregburch1598 Год назад +4

    I'm a life-long aviation enthusiast (66 years old) -- my dad was an engineer who worked in aviation since the 1940s. I've never known how wooden props were made before this video. It was both profoundly informative, and also very, very fun. THANKS!!!

    • @donald8354
      @donald8354 Год назад

      Do you like the Wright Brothers?

  • @gerardvila4685
    @gerardvila4685 Год назад +1

    Great video!
    Reminds me of a French TV program on people who built their dream vehicle. One couple built a single-engine plane INSIDE their house: I think it was fuselage in the living room, tail in the kitchen and wings in the garage. They lived like that for three years... but once they'd finished it and got it certified, they decided they BOTH wanted to fly and started on a second one!

  • @emily36130
    @emily36130 Год назад +10

    I have made hand carved wooden blades for a wind turbine. Seeing them spin in the wind was already pretty cool. Flying a wooden prop that you made yourself must be infinitely cooler. Great work!

  • @cookingwithcuyandotherfuns6238
    @cookingwithcuyandotherfuns6238 Год назад +1

    She is awesome!! Does beautiful work! Our wood prop on our Pietenpol is a 72-42 Falcon. (65 HP Pietenpol, NX48MC) Aha---my friend Scott! Too funny. Small world!! Never met Tim and Joylani but went back and forth a lot....awesome, gifted couple. So tragic. Great video!

  • @collin_builds
    @collin_builds Год назад +59

    I’ve followed Culver Props for years, so happy to see this crossover!

    • @Graham_Wideman
      @Graham_Wideman Год назад +6

      Apparently quite a few pilots follow Culver Props... literally!

    • @hotcopter
      @hotcopter Год назад +1

      Wow.!! I love Culver Props they are the best.!! And u did it yourself helping Top.!! Sending love.!! 💞

  • @markbosworth9877
    @markbosworth9877 Год назад

    A totally woderfull video. That duplicator lathe is a work of art and function. A modern CNC machine could do it but wouldn't have the soul that machine has. Thank you for a great story.

  • @darkphoenix8715
    @darkphoenix8715 Год назад +3

    I literally couldn’t hold my excitement in when i saw the lathe, it’s so cool.

  • @warpo007
    @warpo007 Год назад

    That takes some serious balls to fly, let alone, MAKE YOUR OWN PROP!!! Balls the size of planets! that's a compliment! I'm an Aussie, Xyla

  • @cassijane22
    @cassijane22 Год назад +3

    This is like an episode of how it's made with two of the coolest people ever!!! Thanks for creating this awesome video.

  • @arizonagoodtimes
    @arizonagoodtimes Год назад +2

    Super cool how they create these props. Each step demonstrated meticulous and ingenious craftsmanship. I also liked the safety wiring when they installed the completed prop on the customer's plane. And then they flew it!

  • @B00s3
    @B00s3 Год назад +4

    Loved this!
    Xyla your deadpan stare into the camera during sanding had me choking on my coffee. Loved every bit of this video, and that lathe!

  • @FlyMeAirplane
    @FlyMeAirplane Год назад +1

    Fun video! I like the prop backside to be black so you don't see it in flight. I like some white at the front of the prop tips so when running on the ground you see this white arc and know its running.

  • @alexlandherr
    @alexlandherr Год назад +12

    I really liked seeing the “saw” that carved/cut the propeller blade by tracing the outline. Cool concept!

  • @wayausofbounds9255
    @wayausofbounds9255 Год назад +1

    That whole video, prop making to flying looked like so much fun. That prop is a work of art.

  • @Lintary
    @Lintary Год назад +4

    One of those times you watch something being made and it makes so much sense that is how it is done you nearly feel stupid for not realizing it.
    Loved the whole thing and lovely little plane in the end.

  • @patrickh7368
    @patrickh7368 Год назад

    Blimey….I was “glued” to the screen from start to finish, how interesting was that..! No idea the amount of variation and the technical details behind prop making 😮 fabulous x

  • @parrotraiser6541
    @parrotraiser6541 Год назад +12

    Flying behind a prop you've helped make must be a thrill.

  • @NewHampshireJack
    @NewHampshireJack Год назад

    My compliments to the video creator. You have given an old retired guy in the Philippines great joy. Thank you for posting this excellent RUclips and bringing back some happy memories from my younger years.

  • @theblindbuildergrandminuti5648
    @theblindbuildergrandminuti5648 Год назад +3

    Oh! Nice! That’s so great to keep some these skill alive.

  • @TheCrease1
    @TheCrease1 Год назад

    Just no words to explain how cool this whole video is. Thanks for showing us this amazing process. That life might be the coolest machine in history. Very entertaining to see you and Alaina work together. Ya'll are the same person.

  • @CallumFinlayson
    @CallumFinlayson Год назад +18

    First time since finding her channel a new video's come out -- been bingeing on the back-catalogue the last week-or-so, great to see something brand new!

    • @kameljoe21
      @kameljoe21 Год назад

      You will be lucky to see half a dozen or so videos from her per year. I am one of her biggest haters and she knows it.

    • @jonasholzem2909
      @jonasholzem2909 Год назад +5

      @@kameljoe21 Who cares? If it's half a dozen of great videos like that, why not just enjoy them?

    • @kameljoe21
      @kameljoe21 Год назад

      @@jonasholzem2909 Because she asked everyone via a community post if she should buy a plane or build a shop and the votes where a huge margin to build the shop to create more videos and she bought a plane.
      Then she got evicted from her place and moved in to a shed and called that a shop video build. She said this directly to me about how it was a shop video when it was not. It was a saw stop which was donated to her if I am not mistaken.
      She started this channel and blew up during covid and then now collects monthly salary from 911 people who support her for 3 dollars or more per month. If we are going by the low price she likely walks away with 1500 or more after they take their cut and she pays her taxes if she even does that. She added around 100 new people up from the the plane ride video with Simone.
      At this rate she no longer has to work hard to make a living on top of the ad money she might get and any brand deals she has or will get.
      I clearly do not know why anyone who pays money would ever allow people to stiff them.
      Keep in mind we are not giving her 3 dollars a month to sit around on her ass doing nothing while she is off living her best life. The condtions most people do is to give her money to help support her in doing these videos. Not to take advantage of people. There are a lot of creators who have been doing this. I mean a lot of creators who do this and they make 10s of thousands of dollars a month.
      I can give you one example Stuff made here makes around 13.500 on the low end at 5 dollars a month and 2700 plus people and still has not uploaded anything for 5 plus months.
      You want people to respect these people. FFS this is never going to happen.
      I am done supporting people. Pulling all my funding and no longer going to support anyone who does not upload stuff.

    • @heartsky
      @heartsky Год назад +1

      @@kameljoe21 You're clearly obsessed and don't sound healthy, maybe take a break from her channel, might do you good.

    • @kameljoe21
      @kameljoe21 Год назад

      @@heartsky Take a break, its not like she uploads that often. Some people watch all of the creators videos from early on. While many come and go just for one video. Those of us who have been here a very long time tend to know a lot more than you one timers who could care less. She went out of her way to piss off her viewers by the actions she did and she is not gonna get away with it. She knows for a fact that I am a hater and because of that I will likely stick around for years and make sure she knows it. This will be years of enjoyment to which people like you will respond and I will get a kick out of it.

  • @brookekathryn1980
    @brookekathryn1980 Год назад +1

    I've been flying longe than I can walk. I was buddy boxing and teaching a new guy to fly this morning. I took control after a hard turn lost two mistakes of altitude. Unfortunately, Even though we pre-tripped his new airplane three times in a row, so that he could learn how to make sure everything was done properly, unknown slack under his battery strap gave way just enough and pulled out of the battery tray.
    The CG shifted like a brick to the tail. Flipped the switch to safe and landed safely.
    Had he/we/I crashed, he'd likely never buy a plane again nor fly again.
    It would be one less person in the hobby. I'm happy to say, he was shooken up, but he and I will be flying again tomorrow!

  • @lemonherb1
    @lemonherb1 Год назад +3

    That prop lathe kinda reminds me of a key cutting machine to a degree. Super cool process overall, and a fantastic art form. Thanks for bringing us along!

  • @devincalhoun3792
    @devincalhoun3792 Год назад +1

    I love all things engineered (I share this love with both my sons as well) and this was just a joy to watch. I had no idea how a wooden propeller was made and while I’ve seen some amazing (and large) lathes for both wood and metal, I have NEVER seen one quite like this. I loved watching every second of this video from grabbing the wood planks to taking flight. Keep it up Xyla!

  • @richbuilds_com
    @richbuilds_com Год назад +3

    That pattern following cutter is a thing of engineering beauty. As simple as it needs to be.

  • @mattlewandowski73
    @mattlewandowski73 Год назад

    Love the choice of music at the end, not to mention the B&W segment... gave a great feel to showcasing the first flight of the new prop.

  • @dolphin64575
    @dolphin64575 Год назад +2

    I understand Xyla's fascination with the lathe! That's so cool!

  • @nicholaswouters1203
    @nicholaswouters1203 Год назад +2

    This is incredible ! it is really cool that there are still people doing this, and extra cool that it is a small company like this, and not some cnc/robot arm just churning them out.

  • @dan725
    @dan725 Год назад +6

    this is AMAZING! They’re preserving an art form with a new generation!

  • @blaster-zy7xx
    @blaster-zy7xx Год назад

    She can make ANYTHING!!!! What impresses me is the effort to make stuff PLUS record the process PLUS edit the video. That is all ALOT of work and time!

  • @alexit123
    @alexit123 Год назад +7

    Props to you for such an awesome video ! 😉

  • @JimPekarek
    @JimPekarek Год назад

    So good to see people using proper PPE when working with hazardous materials. The number of times I've watched people on RUclips sand carbon fiber or use noxious chemicals without a respirator is too damn high.
    Also this was a really cool process to watch!

  • @davidf2281
    @davidf2281 Год назад +4

    12:39 That lathe is amazing

  • @ClanMcDuck
    @ClanMcDuck Год назад +1

    Amazing. I love watching videos of people who are experts at their craft. Thank you for sharing this with everyone!

  • @teamgt7690
    @teamgt7690 Год назад +3

    skill, talent and fun, actual girl power at its best...respect!

  • @pharynx007
    @pharynx007 Год назад +1

    that lathe was awesome!
    also, this video reminded me that i actually know how to do safety wire. i haven't actually done it in 10 years or so, but i technically know how to do it.

  • @Nerdfighter1123
    @Nerdfighter1123 Год назад +6

    That lathe is awesome!

  • @jemakrol
    @jemakrol Год назад +1

    Seen a couple of vids with Culver and the job she does is just mind blowing!
    Seeing you visit and do what you do and everything: amazing and wholesome! Did the prop perform good with the plane? I'd expect it to but still...
    Tht lathe is mesmerizing for sure by the way. Only thing I kinde missed is the surface process, it's so satisfying to see the propeller gets is surface finish and final elegance.
    I so much enjoyed this video. Thanks for being you. Joy and creativity combined.

  • @JohannesSchmitz
    @JohannesSchmitz Год назад +2

    Awesome project, would have loved to get more technical information about that particular prop you made and why it works well for the plane you've put it on, including discussion of the size, profile, etc.

  • @GeirGunnarss
    @GeirGunnarss Год назад

    So fantastic to see a person with a passion for old-school craftsmanship continue on the tradition and it seems she is preparing the next generation to take over one day.

  • @helixhippie
    @helixhippie Год назад +5

    This was the coolest episode of, anything, I've seen in a long time. She's brilliant. And her husband is a lucky man.

  • @eliotbrown4506
    @eliotbrown4506 Год назад +1

    A delight to follow along from the secrets of the source to the prop in use. A wonderful trip and very nice to be in your presence as you go. Also great fun, yes... sanding can ummm... take a while!

  • @cjsjedi73
    @cjsjedi73 Год назад +15

    So glad to see you back Xyla!🎉

  • @JeRKII
    @JeRKII Год назад

    What a unique art form I wonder how many place's in the world make such amazing propellers ?
    This had to be a very special bucket list item.

  • @StSparky
    @StSparky Год назад

    My great uncle Leo Kaplan & my Dad made wooden propellers. My dad is 100 & on the 18th this month will celebrate his 73rd anniversary with my mom.
    Used to have a prop with a clock in it in my room as a kid.
    Thank you Xyla.

  • @ekarolak
    @ekarolak Год назад +28

    Next step is to build a whole plane Xyla 😅

    • @archivist17
      @archivist17 Год назад +3

      Well, she's been hanging out with Peter Sripol, so it's possible she shared ideas..

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +1

      I could probably do that, assuming origami ones count.

  • @ProductsChannel
    @ProductsChannel Год назад

    Wow. That is truly impressive. When you said lathe, I was thinking straight bores into the wood. But the lathe just blew my mind. It's like those tracing pens we used as kids to trace from one sheet of paper to another. But this lathe traces the prop and cuts out another in its likeness. That is amazing. Everything about it is an intricate artform. The way she cuts those boards which look so seemingly effortless - to the balancing. Y'all did a phenomenal job. I also love the beauty in the way the prop bolts are secured. Thanks for making and sharing this video Xyla.

  • @hwhack
    @hwhack Год назад +3

    Xyla uses the belt saw like a heart surgeon.

  • @wilgarcia1
    @wilgarcia1 Год назад +3

    That must have been fun getting a classic design up in the air like that =D

  • @gaillaffer7579
    @gaillaffer7579 Год назад +2

    You can’t beat the smell of a wood shop. Great video. Thank you.

  • @bman5988
    @bman5988 Год назад +39

    She’s given us Ladies Who Launch (rockets) and now Ladies Who Lathe (airplane props)

  • @sommelierofstench
    @sommelierofstench Год назад +2

    i love that lathe wow. what a cool machine 😩

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Год назад +174

    Xyla is the only RUclipsr who casually goes from joining circus to making wooden airplane propeller

    • @kurtnelle
      @kurtnelle Год назад +2

      And all the content is totally lit!

    • @Rickster621
      @Rickster621 Год назад +6

      You're literally in all the channels i watch. Last i saw you where on mxr plays

    • @reclhoss
      @reclhoss Год назад

      @@Rickster621 I see em a lot too.

    • @rustyudder
      @rustyudder Год назад

      I'm here because of bulletproof dress 😅

    • @QuanrumPresence
      @QuanrumPresence Год назад +1

      There is one more ;)

  • @KonigSchutze
    @KonigSchutze Год назад +1

    This whole process is freaking badass!!
    Thanks Xyla !!

  • @j.robertsergertson4513
    @j.robertsergertson4513 Год назад +6

    I am amazed that wooden airplane props are just boards "Glued" together 🤯

    • @TheBigburcie
      @TheBigburcie Год назад +4

      Wood is an amazing material. The combination of flex when needed and rigidity when needed at a relatively light weight (depending on the variety) is hard to replicate.

    • @UhOhUmm
      @UhOhUmm Год назад +2

      @@TheBigburcie Wood is essentially a natural plastic. It's a fiber bound by lignin, which is an organic polymer, just like most plastics are some fiber (glass or carbon) bound by a different polymer. And when you laminate wood by gluing boards together you eliminate the natural weakness of wood, because it wants to split along the grain. So yeah, it's not hard to replicate at all, if anything it's really really bad compared to modern materials.

    • @myotherusername9224
      @myotherusername9224 Год назад

      "when you laminate wood by gluing boards together you eliminate the natural weakness of wood, because it wants to split along the grain"
      except that in this case, the grain goes in the same direction in every layer, so how does this eliminate the weakness of wanting to split along the grain ?
      " it's really really bad compared to modern materials"
      Wood is bad? How so ?

    • @UhOhUmm
      @UhOhUmm Год назад

      @@myotherusername9224 it's heavier than say carbon fiber or glass fiber polymers, it can experience water damage if the finish is damaged. It does go in the same direction every layer, but they aren't perfectly aligned and wood glue is stronger than lignin, so it binds them better.

    • @michaelsamson3276
      @michaelsamson3276 3 месяца назад

      @@UhOhUmm Some of the most modern propellers, like the MT for example, still use wood covered in a plastic with a stainless steel leading edge.

  • @whorhaydelfuego7190
    @whorhaydelfuego7190 Год назад +2

    That lathe was really cool to see in action!

  • @cabe_bedlam
    @cabe_bedlam Год назад +5

    The eternal complaint - "I don't have quite as much room as I need."

  • @robertshorthill6836
    @robertshorthill6836 6 месяцев назад +1

    Been doing woodworking after I dropped out of college. Made lots of strange things but never made any propellers. I feel like I missed a whole big deal there.

  • @timpatton3948
    @timpatton3948 Год назад +38

    I love to see old craftsmanship still alive and kicking. Yes kids you still need math.

    • @douglasboyle6544
      @douglasboyle6544 Год назад

      That's exactly what I was thinking too😂

    • @Noahmadic
      @Noahmadic Год назад +2

      You can relearn math as it's necessary throughout your life though

    • @douglasboyle6544
      @douglasboyle6544 Год назад

      @@Noahmadic it's still good to have a foundation though to begin with

  • @karonbeilunka6845
    @karonbeilunka6845 Год назад +2

    Xyla just living her best life sanding ;)

  • @Dr.K.Wette_BE
    @Dr.K.Wette_BE Год назад +2

    Hand made has always that prestigious aura that industrial made objects will never have.

  • @MichaelBerthelsen
    @MichaelBerthelsen Год назад

    I LOVE the sound of that little engine! Such a cute flight, and gorgeous!❤👍 And of course the propeller works perfectly.😉

  • @ShugoAWay
    @ShugoAWay Год назад +3

    Uh, odd question by why couldn't the new propeller go on her plane? i missed that part

    • @xylafoxlin
      @xylafoxlin  Год назад +3

      Good question!! My plane is certified but the prop is experimental so it can only go on an experimental aircraft

    • @ShugoAWay
      @ShugoAWay Год назад +1

      @Xyla Foxlin ah legal red tape? That makes sense

  • @Simple_But_Expensive
    @Simple_But_Expensive Год назад +1

    Worked on gas turbine engines for 45 years. Lockwiring is indeed an art form. Gas turbines have thousands of pieces requiring lockwire. After a while, I stopped using lockwire pliers. I found it easier to get right by hand twisting and maybe using needlenose pliers to feed it through the holes. Glad to see you twisting the stub end. That end is razor sharp, and the cuts from them take forever to heal. Not tucking the ends is a good way to get your whole family cursed.

  • @glowingeye
    @glowingeye Год назад

    That's the coolest plane I've ever seen, wow!

  • @johnmccoy9653
    @johnmccoy9653 Год назад +1

    I always enjoy watching your aviation-related content, Xyla -- mainly to see the unbridled joy on your face as you take to the air.

  • @tojiroh
    @tojiroh Год назад +1

    Rooting for a Lathe-Night series with you and other lady builders! 😉👍🏼

  • @totallybonkers
    @totallybonkers Год назад

    Wow. This was like a better version of How it's Made!! Love that she makes propellers just like her grandpa ❤ So cool.

  • @Mojje42
    @Mojje42 Год назад +1

    Awesome video
    the machine to cut out the propeller was incredible to watch in action
    oh and balancing props is so important... learnt that from my RC days but had it much easier
    as we only had to think about horizontal balance and the prop was plastic so easy to trim... still a great feeling when the prop was steady on the balancer
    really cool airplane

  • @WJSpies
    @WJSpies Год назад

    This is amazing. Xyla entrances me; my concentration on her vids is something I typically don't do all the time with other content makers, but she captures my attention almost every time I watch one of hers. She's a force of nature somehow. I don't know how she pulls together so much of her apparent energy. I know it must take tons of effort but she makes it look effortless. And nice!
    I'm an old geezer, but in my almost forgotten youth I was a lot like her. So I really get it. Hats off, Xyla.. you're pretty awesome. 👍🏻

  • @ltpinecone
    @ltpinecone Год назад +1

    That lathe is easily the coolest thing in this video!

  • @bradmaas6875
    @bradmaas6875 Год назад

    That was really cool. Watching the lathe cut the profile into the prop. Watching you sand with your eyes wide open made my eyes itch, they must have a really good dust collection there.

  • @siffoine
    @siffoine Год назад +1

    So cool! You can tell she is a true master of her craft, the best can always communicate even the most obscure things in captivating way.

  • @dgoddard
    @dgoddard Год назад

    Love watching Culver Prop's channel. I'm from Springfield, MO and wanted to stop in and see them on the many trips we took to Rolla when our son was in college, but never got the chance.

  • @TheChubbs6977
    @TheChubbs6977 Год назад

    Safety Wire!!! The bane of my existence in the hydraulic shop and doing brake hubs lol.
    Few more years and you'll get those twists done perfectly lol