Fair enough Slick and your height might make the top of the prop seem too close to your head because of the angle of the prop and engine while the plane is tail low.Slick Goodlin wrote: ↑Tue Apr 13, 2021 3:26 amI’ve tried it and am not a fan. When I prop from in front I can very naturally step away from the plane as I pull the blade through, from behind it almost feels like the motion pulls me forward toward the prop. It may be related to my being a human Sasquatch as I’m also very uncomfortable hand propping anything with a low prop shaft for much the same reason. If the middle of the prop is very far below the middle of my chest I tap out and let someone else do it.David MacRay wrote: ↑Tue Apr 13, 2021 1:53 amI’m kind of surprised that hand propping from between the prop and the cabin door is not more common. Seems like a better way to do it.
I bet flipping a prop from behind feels really natural to anyone with time in a J-3 on floats.
I might be too feeble to get a good swing with one hand like that fellow in the video I posted. He also uses his left hand to pull himself back as he does it.
I watch many people doing it from the front with both hands and one foot swinging off the ground. That looks sketchy. Seems like it might be easy to lose your balance.
I can remember being shy as a kid about hand propping models. Then I saw Cox made one with a spring you could wind backwards then just pull your hand away. I liked that better bought one but never flew it. A buddy of mine had a thick rubber finger guard. Now you can get battery powered starters. I don’t have one now but have become comfortable with my technique and the way I spin a prop on a model my hand naturally goes away from the prop easy.