My prefered option for ease is magic tape on the underside of the prop. The other way is spray lacquer under the prop and sand that rather than the prop material its self.
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Excellent idea Droider..... I will try that from now on......
In the case of the new CF props, it is apparently the carbon fiber strands that provide 98% of the strength.... so cutting the surface strands by sanding seems like a bad idea.
As for changing the structural integrity of the prop
For plastic props I agree entirely however with carbon, not so sure. But why take the chance? Sanding on its own is destructive and irreversible. Putting some lacquer on first and sanding fine but sanding on its own? The only advantage I can see to sanding is a cosmetic one ie you don't see any tape on the blade. With that being the case I just don't see the point in sanding as the cons outweight the pros.
Best balancer for Tiger Props? The Dubro works very well, a high quality magnetic balancer should be better and the Dynex Hobby dynamic balancer is the best but expensive and rather complicated!
Personally I don't like removing anything as you just don't know what you have taken out or what this does to the prop's structural integrity. I just use a bit of electrical tape over the leading edge. Never comes off and is really easy to do.
With all that said, Im not sure if top or bottom makes a huge difference although maintaining the curve on the top probably better maintains the aerodynamics of the prop so I would go for sanding on the bottom.
"For plastic props I agree entirely however with carbon, not so sure."
I am, and I will let you all know how it works out. I have 8 12" carbon fiber propellers balanced in the horizontal plane. To do this I used a 500 grit metal sandpaper, then moved up to 800 and finally 1000. I like the sanding method because it is permanent. I also am not a fan of tape on the blades, not pretty.
To finish the blades I will use some even finer grits and polish with a buffer.
I sand the trailing edges too and it does change the shape slightly, but the flight controller will adjust for the difference which should be minimal.
I have made my own prop balancer using a needle and it is very sensitive which you can read about here: http://diydrones.com/profiles/blogs/a-diy-magnetic-prop-balancer
The key is to make sure that the center spindle it very balanced itself, test your props with the spindle in different positions, it should make no difference and the prop should settle in the same spot every time... Using this method, the props are very close to perfectly balanced and it is much more elegant to some other methods I have seen.
As for the sanding cutting the fibers, I try to keep the sanding light and toward the tip of the blade. The vast majority of the stress that the prop endures is close to the hub, how many times have you heard of a prop exploding in mid flight at the tips?
As for the hubs, if they are really out, I will balance with some lead tape...