Unless of course, you actually own it! LOLFly it like you rented it.
Unless of course, you actually own it! LOLFly it like you rented it.
Good gosh.... Do some of you guys even fly???
- How in the world did we get talking about Mooneys? This is a dang Cherokee 6/260.
Considering this is the first time you mentioned the type of aircraft, how would anyone have known?
Didn't think type mattered as much...
It was actually mentioned in the 4th post. I too was wondering how this turned into MooneySpace. On a side note, I climb full throttle and 2500 with my O-540, but I'm at 25 squared in less than 3mins (thanks to a 1200-1400ft/min climb rate). The 235/250/260 HP Lycoming 540 was not certified with a maximum takeoff power time. So if temperatures allow it, why reduce power? This works in my plane and my friend's M20C. Plus pulling the throttle back will lean the mixture and heat up your CHTs.Considering this is the first time you mentioned the type of aircraft, how would anyone have known?
there are other reasons to getting up to altitude faster.....but, as long as the heat stress is lower than it needs....the rest is immaterial. Do whatever it takes most efficiently is best.Is spending 10 minutes climbing with a CHT of 400 better than spending 20 minutes climbing with a CHT of 390? I've been always edumucated that the faster you can get to your cruise altitude (within reason of course) the better.. physics dictates that you'll need to use the same amount of energy to get up to cruise altitude, seems like you're just keeping the engine in a low airflow regime longer by a slightly reduced power climb. Especially in a non turbo plane where basically the minute you start climbing you are losing power anyway.. so why not keep the throttle plate wide open?
I have more important things to remember, than some 3 letter acronym I may or may not have seen in the past 15+ years.
what things more important do you have to remember?
Then it makes no sense for you to complain when people posted about Mooney's when you're in a Piper.Didn't think type mattered as much...
Then it makes no sense for you to complain when people posted about Mooney's when you're in a Piper.
Buy me a different plane, and I'll post what I do when I fly it. All I got is a Mooney.Normally I agree but all of the sudden it turned into a Mooney love fest. Made me feel "icky." LOL
Do people still do that?Ether of you two think to look in the POH?
Ether of you two think to look in the POH?
Good starting point but, unless it is a limitation, not necessarily the answer, particularly on older aircraft.so....what does the AFM say?
https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2018/october/pilot/savvy-aviator-hip-to-be-over-squareMy buddy and I had a discussion the other day. I climb out at MCP and 2500 on the prop until I level off. I then pull the prop back to 2300 and adjust the mixture (going through 5000') which normally gives me 65% cruise.
My buddy pulls the throttle and prop back to 25 squared just as soon as we clear 700'.
Backgrounds for us - Both of us are ATP's with thousands of hours but little time over the years flying small piston stuff. Buddy is retired corporate pilot having flown P-51's, F4U's, B25's in the airshow world in the 70's and 80's (yes, he's a tad bit older...) I didn't get to fly the warbirds but fly for a living.
What works best? Is this the "oversquared" argument?
FRP - Full Rental Power.Fly it like you rented it.
FRP - Full Rental Power.
Lol. Not gonna happen as long as I have to pay for mx.
I cruise it at 65% for a reason!
I’m curious where the check mate checklist got the 24/24 number from