Whitney
Ejection Handle Pulled
Curious if you mean running a rental harder than you'd run your own or are talking about the OP?
How some pilots/students would treat an airplane.
Curious if you mean running a rental harder than you'd run your own or are talking about the OP?
Well, at least he IS smart enough to fool an inanimate object like a Hobbs meter.While I have thoughts on this whole thing, it's so hard for me to take my "lawyer" hat off. And because of that, I just can't get over the OP actually admitting to the flight school that he did this...
The instructor may have just be trying to instruct in proper engine operation.Haha! The instructor doesn’t care, it’s not on his dime. I agree that charging Hobbs time doesn’t encourage renters to treat the airplane with kindness. Tach should be the standard.
Might have been stealing those hours at a discounted block rate, too.Willing to bet OP stole a ton of time. You don’t quibble like this over a few hours.
The POH should be the authority on that, and the typical training-airplane POH will have cruise settings right up to redline RPM or full throttle, whichever comes first.The instructor may have just be trying to instruct in proper engine operation.
The POH covers takeoffs and landings as well. Instructors still teach them.The POH should be the authority on that, and the typical training-airplane POH will have cruise settings right up to redline RPM or full throttle, whichever comes first.
I inferred from your other post that the instructor was trying to teach the student to use less power to make the engine last longer or something. The POH gives power settings for various RPMs and altitudes along with fuel burns and airspeeds. All of those settings are approved for continuous operation unless otherwise noted.The POH covers takeoffs and landings as well. Instructors still teach them.
I’ve got the power table on the sun visor in the Archer. I like to run it around 65-68% power in cruise. That’s generally in the 2450-2475 range, maybe 2500 if I’m a little higher. Running at 2600-2700 just seems too hard on the engine - I’d really dislike running it that fast. Personally, 75% continuous all the time seems like it would accelerate engine wear, no?The redline for that engine is 2700. How many pilots cruise at 2600 or 2650, or even at 2700 if they're at 8K? That's 75% at that altitude. I've seen pilots using 2400 at altitudes like that and wondering why the airplane is mushing along so slowly.
It sounds like the guy who got caught cheating on his PPL test and wanted to know how to scam his instructor. Seems like the same style of BS writing anyway.Is this the same guy that didn't know he needed a certificate to work on airplanes...
Thank you. I was wondering how far this would go before someone came up with how the Hobbs is powered.
Except you get ripped off, time-wise, with the tach when practicing slow flight.Just use tach hours in the future, much easier.
Don't drop the bong on carpet, very hard to clean up from the 1965 orange shag.
I've heard of students in puppy mills that didn't have hobbs idling on the taxiway for an hour before a flight.Except you get ripped off, time-wise, with the tach when practicing slow flight.
We ran the flight school Lycomings at 2500 in cruise all the time. They all reached TBO, and all had compressions in the upper 70s when we changed them. Those engines, unless they have a time limit on full power (such as five minutes for takeoff and climb) are certified to produce full power their whole lives. Some of them do it, too, hauling parajumpers or towing gliders. The geared engines run at RPMs much higher than that, too. Some ops, like pipeline or powerline patrolling or fish spotting, run at high power levels for over 3000 hours on an engine.I’ve got the power table on the sun visor in the Archer. I like to run it around 65-68% power in cruise. That’s generally in the 2450-2475 range, maybe 2500 if I’m a little higher. Running at 2600-2700 just seems too hard on the engine - I’d really dislike running it that fast. Personally, 75% continuous all the time seems like it would accelerate engine wear, no?
How some pilots/students would treat an airplane.
Except you get ripped off, time-wise, with the tach when practicing slow flight.
We ran the flight school Lycomings at 2500 in cruise all the time. They all reached TBO, and all had compressions in the upper 70s when we changed them. Those engines, unless they have a time limit on full power (such as five minutes for takeoff and climb) are certified to produce full power their whole lives. Some of them do it, too, hauling parajumpers or towing gliders. The geared engines run at RPMs much higher than that, too. Some ops, like pipeline or powerline patrolling or fish spotting, run at high power levels for over 3000 hours on an engine.
Lycoming even tells you to run the thing at full throttle, redline RPM, in the break-in process SB.
Cessna wouldn't put cruise charts showing high power settings in their POH/AFM if it was going to wear the engine out sooner.
Exactly.
Most training planes, and a lot of rentals, are naturally aspirated, and most airplane engines such as Cont & Lyc run low compression ratios, and low rpm. These are not highly stressed engines at all, even at their full rated power, only made at sea level, on a cool day. But who just flies around at sea level? Most of the time we take off already above sea level, so even at take off the engine doesn't make 100% of its rated power, and then we climb up to 6500, 7500, 8500, 9500, 10500, 11500, or whatever cruise altitude we choose, and that fire walled throttle means nothing to the engine, because the altitude cut the power way back, without the pilot ever pulling the throttle back.
Next week I am doing a long trip up to Yellowknife, a trip I've done numerous times. Weather permitting, I usually cruise around 9500 or 10500, so despite my never once inching the throttle back from take off, till ready to land, my engine is never stressed. Heck I don't even take off at sea level, so it is not making full power even on the roll.
Tachs are calibrated to one RPM value which is usually a specific cruise value. Turn less RPMs and less time is recorded for the same actual time period.How do you get ripped off in slow flight?
Tachs are calibrated to one RPM value which is usually a specific cruise value. Turn less RPMs and less time is recorded for the same actual time period.
That gots me wondering. Probably ain’t no thang with your plane, but. What about some planes where over stressing the engine might be a problem. Up there in it’s colder than a well diggers azz in Fairbanks in February country, do some folk not use full throttle for take off when it’s seriously cold.Exactly.
Most training planes, and a lot of rentals, are naturally aspirated, and most airplane engines such as Cont & Lyc run low compression ratios, and low rpm. These are not highly stressed engines at all, even at their full rated power, only made at sea level, on a cool day. But who just flies around at sea level? Most of the time we take off already above sea level, so even at take off the engine doesn't make 100% of its rated power, and then we climb up to 6500, 7500, 8500, 9500, 10500, 11500, or whatever cruise altitude we choose, and that fire walled throttle means nothing to the engine, because the altitude cut the power way back, without the pilot ever pulling the throttle back.
Next week I am doing a long trip up to Yellowknife, a trip I've done numerous times. Weather permitting, I usually cruise around 9500 or 10500, so despite my never once inching the throttle back from take off, till ready to land, my engine is never stressed. Heck I don't even take off at sea level, so it is not making full power even on the roll.
If the plane doesn't have a Hobbs meter and he's logging based on the tach, maybe he's talking about the fact that he would be logging less time than he was in the air.I'm with @Whitney on not understanding how that's getting ripped off. If you're billed by tach time, then you're getting an hour of practice for 0.9 or 0.8 or whatever hours of billing. That's not getting ripped off, it's exactly the opposite, getting free training. If you actually log the tach time, then you're breaking even, but if you log the real clock time, once again you're ahead. So in no case do I see the student getting ripped off while practicing slow flight.
What am I not seeing?
I took it as logging your personal time per the tach which you lose the .1 or .2.What am I not seeing?
If the plane doesn't have a Hobbs meter and he's logging based on the tach, maybe he's talking about the fact that he would be logging less time than he was in the air.
Sounds like they're all owners. Among rental planes, I've never even seen one without a Hobbs. Of course, I've never rented one in Canada or Mexico.Brought this topic up with some pilot friends, only 3 out of 7 even have a hobbs meter in their plane.
Hey, if you're going to be stupid, how about shutting off the engine to stop the tach time also?
What could go wrong?
If you fly into a thunderstorm that way, you could probably climb pretty fast, too.Hey, if you're going to be stupid, how about shutting off the engine to stop the tach time also?
What could go wrong?
until you don’t?If you fly into a thunderstorm that way, you could probably climb pretty fast, too.
Pretty much right up to then.until you don’t?
Not much.Hey, if you're going to be stupid, how about shutting off the engine to stop the tach time also?
What could go wrong?
Except one who wouldn't recant and was "pressed" to death.Nobody has been burned in Salem.
The hanged them.
How some pilots/students would treat an airplane.
I don't see anything wrong with running a rental closer to the edge than you would your own plane. (in this situation it's really a moot point as explained above, pretty tough to hurt the ole 172 with the throttle).
If I'm paying for a plane wet I have no responsibility to run it at peak efficiency, I see zero moral issues with running it at any fuel burn I'd like.
There's not much I could do that would be more abusive than 95% of the student pilots in the plane on any given day.