MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
“Steep” and “fast” are separate discussions.Yeah, but you are also going forward at quite a clip too. 2,500 fpm at less than 200 kts is fairly steep. 2,500 fpm at 350 kts, not so much.
“Steep” and “fast” are separate discussions.Yeah, but you are also going forward at quite a clip too. 2,500 fpm at less than 200 kts is fairly steep. 2,500 fpm at 350 kts, not so much.
Ok, our VSI didn't go that far,
Just curious, is that flight idle, gear and flaps out?
Ok, our VSI didn't go that far,
Just curious, is that flight idle, gear and flaps out?
Nothing slows down and goes down faster than a turbo prop at flat pitch, or if allowable in beta or reverse. One turbine twin I used to fly could easily exceed 2500 fpm down at flight idle.
Thank you for that video. It explains how most modern day "journalists" obtained their aviation knowledge. ("good thing it had air brakes")Some planes have them, but they're rare because it's tough to pull out. So you need to install brakes:
I believe they have dive shops…..
Your brain really does work in the most interesting ways.
Probably because you didn’t expound, this was generally ignored. The electrically controlled MT prop when set to high RPM does indeed act as a sort of speed brake - set at fine pitch adds resistance to airflow through prop rotating surface area.The 3-bladed MT prop on a Husky is a dive prop. It’s the one thing it does best.
Especially when combined with using the ground to slow the plane.In a piston, using the prop to slow the plane is hard on the motor.
I think it’s common when flight schools and instructors train for the checkride. And then stop…Is it common for Cirrus pilots to understand nothing about props and engine management?
Is it common for Cirrus pilots to understand nothing about props and engine management?
So if I have a Grumman Traveler with an O-320 and a Grumman Tiger with an O-360, they would have different pitches?
The FBI will be contacting you shortly.I'm so disappointed in us as a group. How did we all miss the correct answer?
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Well played sir! Well played!I'm so disappointed in us as a group. How did we all miss the correct answer?
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Funny, I’ve wondered that exact same thing. I still don’t understand how it works. Take for example a 150hp O320 and a 180hp O360. Both are turning the the prop the same RPM but one has a little more zippity doo-dah than the other… how? Maybe this is why I didn’t do well in physics class.
Is it common for Cirrus pilots to understand nothing about props and engine management?
There's more Cirruses in the ocean than submarines with parachutes.has OP popped chute yet?
Is it common for Cirrus pilots to understand nothing about props and engine management?
Those double letters got me…I read it differently the first time I glanced at it.has OP popped chute yet?
The cruise prop is designed to allow the engine to reach redline at full throttle in level flight. That's how most fixed-pitch prop airplanes are delivered. What good is full rated power if you can never get to it except in a dive?Your engine cannot likely spin a "cruise prop" at full RPM.