HUH. You are saying you have a power setting of say 2300 RPM. You reduce the throttle until the props drop to 2100 RPM and if you push the props levers forward the RPM increases? That cannot happen unless something is really screwed up.
Talking RPM and MP I've got the blue knobs forward and MP around 15 inches
But in this example I've never been that slow in a twin (outside of short final) where if I pull throttle to idle they reduce to 2100. Depending on what I'm flying they're screaming anywhere from 2500 to 2700
But the bottom line is I was trained (initial multi training, check rides, proficiency checks, recurrent) to stay at blue line until short final / landing made. I don't know of any light GA twin that will accelerate
back to blue line (single engine climb) with gear and flaps down. Sure you can put the nose down and lose gravity, but if you're low to the ground that's less than ideal. This does not mean that we're coming over the numbers and starting the flare at blue line, that'd be crazy and result in a huge float. But I'm also not sitting three miles out on the approach dilly dallying under blue line.
Vmc, red line, is a different matter, but that will just keep the plane upright and "controllable", has nothing to do with climb
Landing, on the other hand, has you well above the obstacles with a lot of excess power available from gravity just by pointing the nose down and the plane is dirtier, thus reducing the most aerodynamically clean airspeed for reference, as well as being at less weight.
Landing has us well above the obstacles?? Maybe at the FAF.. but landing has you near the ground, and getting closer.
I wouldn't say you have excess power, sure you can point the nose down, but by that logic the plane has the most power in cruise, and has an increasing amount of power as you take off and climb. During landing that regime is shrinking, money is flowing out the bank so to speak
I genuinely don't know what this means "plane is dirtier, thus reducing the most aerodynamically clean airspeed" a dirty plane has loads of drag. A
clean plane twin GA will barely climb on one engine as it is. A dirty one, forget it, you are only going down. But hey you have all that excess power so why worry, right?
Anyway, we can disagree. For those who fly with me in a twin we'll be accelerating to blue line shortly after rotation and staying above it until we're a mile out or less.