How to choose the right propeller for an RC aircraft
Diameter, pitch, motor load, current measurement and how propeller choice changes thrust, speed, efficiency and heat.
Diameter and pitch do different jobs
Diameter strongly affects air volume and load. Larger diameter often gives more low-speed pull, but it can raise current sharply. Pitch affects theoretical forward travel per revolution and can increase speed demand.
A slow trainer, glider, 3D aircraft, EDF alternative and fast sport aircraft do not need the same propeller behavior. Choose for the aircraft mission, not only for maximum thrust.
The propeller controls motor load
Changing propeller size can overload the motor, ESC and battery even when every part was safe before. A small pitch or diameter change can make a large current change.
Use the motor recommendation as the starting point, then test current, RPM, temperature and flight feel with the actual battery.
Balance, clearance and material matter
Every propeller should be inspected and balanced. Ground clearance, spinner fit, hub thickness and blade material all affect safety and reliability.
Wood, carbon, composite and nylon propellers can behave differently. Use propellers intended for the power type and RPM range of the model.
Propeller selection checklist
- Diameter and pitch are inside motor recommendation
- Current measured after installation
- Ground clearance checked
- Propeller balanced
- Hub and spinner fit verified
- Material suits RPM and power type
- Spare propellers selected
Common questions
Does a bigger propeller always give more power?
It can give more thrust, but it also increases load and current. Too much propeller can overheat or damage the power system.
What does pitch change?
Higher pitch usually increases speed demand and load. Lower pitch often gives easier acceleration and lower speed demand.
Should I balance new propellers?
Yes. Balancing reduces vibration, protects bearings and improves reliability.
Relevant products from the catalog
Use these links as the practical buying path after reading the guide: aircraft, power system parts, tools and spares that usually complete the setup.
