Christopher
Filing Flight Plan
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- Jul 1, 2015
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Christopher
Need a good explanation of why the constant speed prop uses throttle to adjust rpm on ground but when up it uses manifold pressure
Nice way to explain itStewartb is correct. Oil pressure has absolutely nothing to do with it; not sure where that idea came from. The prop governor is working just fine on the ground, but the prop is already at the flattest pitch, so it's got nothing to do.
Think about it this way: say you have the prop control set to 2,500RPM, but the prop is only turning, say, 1000 RPM. The governor is going to pitch the blades flatter to try to get the speed up. However, what if there's simply not enough torque to spin the blades that quickly? Well, then the governor will go as fine as it can and then effectively give up. As you open the throttle, more torque (twisting force) is applied to the prop. The blades speed up. Once you hit 2,500RPM, then the governor starts increasing pitch to hold 2,500. When you're reducing power on final, the same thing happens in reverse: you pull the throttle, the governor flattens the blades, but eventually there's just not enough torque to spin the blades at the commanded speed. The blades hit the fine pitch stops.
In theory, the same thing could happen the other way: you could push so much torque into the props that the engine will overspeed despite the blades' being in feather. In a piston engine this is almost impossible due to design limits, and in a turboprop you'll tear up the gearbox. But, in theory, it's possible. Once the governor taps out (i.e. puts the prop in feather), your throttle would, in theory, then control RPM again. So basically, prop governor controls the RPM _within the limits of the governor_. Outside of that, the throttle controls the speed.
I hate it when my CS prop taxes me.
The prop has a "governing range" and it is below it when taxiing. So the prop is at the stops. The prop governor has to have more 20% power or so to start governing much. It might govern a little bit if you pull it out all the way at fast idle.