josephades
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2016
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ja
Happy new year!
I am trying to figure out the following, with a piper archer PA-28-181 (and of course for all similar planes)
Say you have a 300+ nm cross-country trip. In my case, going northwest from KFRG to CYKZ.
- The headwind at 3000 ft averages 25 knots, resulting in flight time of 3 hours 30 min
- The headwind at 8000 ft averages 40 knots, resulting in flight time of 4 hours
In both examples, mixture is leaned down to where the engine gets rough, and then slightly enrichened. Moreover, cruise RPM are both set to about 2550. Lastly, the headwinds are pretty much coming from the same heading you are flying, give or take a couple of degrees.
I know that the higher you go, the less fuel is needed, but in the above example, due to the fact that there is a 30 minute difference in flight time, does it really not make any difference? Or because I am higher, I am still expected to use less fuel at 8000 despite the increase in flight time?
If the fuel consumption would be the same or greater at 8000 ft due to the additional flight time, let's say that the difference between flight times would be significantly less. Rather than being 30 minutes apart, let's call it 15-20 minutes. Would that make a significant difference?
Thanks in advance for all responses
I am trying to figure out the following, with a piper archer PA-28-181 (and of course for all similar planes)
Say you have a 300+ nm cross-country trip. In my case, going northwest from KFRG to CYKZ.
- The headwind at 3000 ft averages 25 knots, resulting in flight time of 3 hours 30 min
- The headwind at 8000 ft averages 40 knots, resulting in flight time of 4 hours
In both examples, mixture is leaned down to where the engine gets rough, and then slightly enrichened. Moreover, cruise RPM are both set to about 2550. Lastly, the headwinds are pretty much coming from the same heading you are flying, give or take a couple of degrees.
I know that the higher you go, the less fuel is needed, but in the above example, due to the fact that there is a 30 minute difference in flight time, does it really not make any difference? Or because I am higher, I am still expected to use less fuel at 8000 despite the increase in flight time?
If the fuel consumption would be the same or greater at 8000 ft due to the additional flight time, let's say that the difference between flight times would be significantly less. Rather than being 30 minutes apart, let's call it 15-20 minutes. Would that make a significant difference?
Thanks in advance for all responses