WannaBePiloto
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- May 17, 2023
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WannaBePiloto
Hey folks,
Something I've always been a bit hazy about I'm hoping someone can help me clear up:
If you change nothing else about the plane, as you climb higher in altitude Indicated Airspeed decreases, right? Because less air molecules get into the pitot tube...
So how is that one power setting that gives you say, 100knots at sea level, also manages to keep your Indicated Airspeed at 100knots at 5,000'?
In my mind, I'd think you'd have to gradually increase power as you climb in order to maintain the same IAS you had at sea level. This in turn of course results in you having a higher TAS than IAS (above sea level). But it seems as if that isn't the case in reality as the same power setting used at 500' is the one used at 5,000'?
Sorry for the stupid question. Surely more to follow though! Thanks!
Something I've always been a bit hazy about I'm hoping someone can help me clear up:
If you change nothing else about the plane, as you climb higher in altitude Indicated Airspeed decreases, right? Because less air molecules get into the pitot tube...
So how is that one power setting that gives you say, 100knots at sea level, also manages to keep your Indicated Airspeed at 100knots at 5,000'?
In my mind, I'd think you'd have to gradually increase power as you climb in order to maintain the same IAS you had at sea level. This in turn of course results in you having a higher TAS than IAS (above sea level). But it seems as if that isn't the case in reality as the same power setting used at 500' is the one used at 5,000'?
Sorry for the stupid question. Surely more to follow though! Thanks!