flyingcheesehead
Touchdown! Greaser!
Make sure I’m on same page- I understand what you say on rollout but distance is time too so I wasn’t thinking of landing roll as much as rounding out or if you are on final and ya notice your sink rate is greater than you would like it’s going to take more time and distance when you add the power in to arrest that sink rate won’t it? So you would want to make sure you don’t find yourself short as what normally could be solved with a touch of power may take a more dramatic touch of power if you misestimated initially, right or no?
Well, you're already going to be short of power up there, so to some extent, yes. However, not much really changes. Distances in the forward direction are going to go by faster, but the plane will feel the same (same IAS) and you'll just notice your groundspeed is faster than normal.
The airplane is going to sink faster than normal just as it will climb slower than normal correct?
If you're maintaining a 3-degree glidepath, and the same airspeed (which you should be), your true airspeed will be faster and thus your descent rate will also increase a little - Not a lot.
So speeds should be kept the same but power setting at home (moderate temps at 800ft) May be lower than what you use in high DA to accomplish same indicates airspeed and sink rate in the pattern?
If you have a constant speed prop, no. Your throttle will just be in further to get the same manifold pressure. With fixed pitch, or if you're at a low enough airspeed to be out of the governing range on a C/S prop, you will have a little higher power setting.
At the end of the day, though... Don't overthink it. Fly the plane, maintain the same airspeeds as normal, and just do what you need to do to make that happen.
I dunno...seems to me if you’re at 70.71% of liftoff speed at the halfway point and wasted the first 100 feet, you’d have 100 feet to spare when you lift off.
True, but in any case you're not going to have any room to wiggle if something happens.