A radial definitely sounds like engine noise.
Most of the turbine noise of a turbo-prop are above your hearing range.Listen closely to a turboprop flying overhead. The jet and prop sounds are very distinct with the jet sound sometimes hard to hear because the prop is so loud.
This. Prop is usually loader if the two, but you definitely get noise from the engine, especially if it is a radial.I’d say it’s a combination of both to some degree, but mostly the prop.
Mostly the prop - especially from the inconsiderate dumbasses that *have* to go high RPM on downwind. Way to make the airport neighbors love ya, jackwagon.
This drives me nuts when I fly with someone for the first time and they jam the prop up way to soon just because it’s on the checklist. They have know idea as to why you move the prop to high rpm for landing.
(Hint: it actually for the landing)
It’s for a potential go around, folks!
When my RPM finally starts to drop when reducing throttle, only then do I push the prop forward.
Exactly. The reason to increase the prop before landing is both for the drag and potential go around.Flat prop at low power settings makes for very effective braking. At low power the rpm won't be high enough to produce much noise.
Mostly the prop - especially from the inconsiderate dumbasses that *have* to go high RPM on downwind. Way to make the airport neighbors love ya, jackwagon.
Exactly. The reason to increase the prop before landing is both for the drag and potential go around.
But, if you hold off until you are already at the low pitch stops, there is no surge or noise associated with moving the lever forward.
Most of my acoustic training was in underwater searching for subs but sound is sound. All acoustic energy (sound) travels forever but looses energy to the medium around it as it propagates. It eventually gets so low it can't be heard. An airplane makes noise in the engine, the prop, and everywhere it disturbs the air. All of those sounds travel (with losses) to the receptor (your ear) and are added in a 3db formula that gets rather complicated but is easily found online. Of course, there are lots of other sounds reaching the same receptor and only the ones with the most energy in the frequency the receptor can process are "heard."
I doubt it but I hope that helped.
My hearing range, or anyone's hearing range? I'll believe either. But if you can't hear it is it still noise?Most of the turbine noise of a turbo-prop are above your hearing range.
All acoustic energy (sound) travels forever but looses energy to the medium around it as it propagates.
I hold off, but it's because it's easier on the equipment.
I don't give two ****s about what the airport neighbors -- who moved in around the airport 40 years after the airport was there -- think about anything related to aircraft operations.
Looking over the actual reported noise complaints, it's only two sociopaths who really complain in any quantity, anyway. Why they're even given a forum for their grievances about their poor choice of purchase location for their homes, is beyond me.
For a while here, pilots were filing Defective Property Notices against any house that complained... which was nice, since the owner would both take a hit on sales price, as well as be required by law to show that notice to the next buyer.
Judge in county court got tired of it (he didn't feel like having extra case load and doing his job), and demanded the phone line that was installed with a recording device be disconnected for noise complaints, so the pro bono pilot/lawyers who were doing it, couldn't get names of complainers via FOIA.
Haven't found any lawyer/pilots to take up the mantle again by writing down names at the public meetings about noise, yet. Haven't really looked, either... but it'd be nice if a bored lawyer would do it again. Show up and complain, here have a Defective Property Notice. You're on public record stating your property has a nuisance you can't stand... enjoy the just fruits of your complaining nature.