It depends on the medium that the propeller is in .
Aircraft propellors are very fast ; several hundred revolutions per minute.
Ship's propellors are much slower ; up to one hundred revolutions per minute.
It can spin pretty fast. On impact, it can break a lot of things, including the yoyo.
It wouldn't, the propellers are designed to propel the helicopter off of the ground, thus the word propeller, not to make the helicopter glide. The wings are too thin to hold up a helicopter and that is why they spin to gain ground as well as using kinetic energy to lift up. The propellers would eventually bend or snap if the helicopter would be to fall, the speed of the wind would break or damage the propellers.
it depends how windy it is by vysnav.k ;-)
10 minutes at 2,000 to 3,000 rpm
Sorry, it doesn't work that way. You are just as dizzy after the second spin as you were after the first. Every year, many children confirm this answer by experiment.
Rockets don't have propellers - they're propelled by direction of exhaust gases through outlets.
There is no such bowling style as 'fast in spin' or 'fast out spin in'.
Staring on the runway looking at the aircraft dead in the nose the propellers spin counterclockwise, from behind the cockpit they spin clockwise.
Fast
Fast Japanese Spin Cycle was created in 1994.
No they spin very very fast
ok dude this is like the second time i get this kinda of question. I will tell you how it work ok? the propellers on an airplane wings works only by the pilots turning them on. The piliots switches a switch on top of his head know as the engine ignition. The plane propellers will spin as the plane taxies to the runway.
they spin and move fast
It can spin pretty fast. On impact, it can break a lot of things, including the yoyo.
Dancers Spin Fast Bcus They Have Lite Shoes Wiv Not Much Grip *AND* Bcus They Are Trained
sometimes, but they need to be on both sides or else the helicopter will lose its balance and crash! it is not beneficial if you put the lights on the propellers because they will move so fast you can't see them...
Most submarines have propellers that spin, pushing them forward. A few smaller research submarines use a water jet for propulsion.