Doggtyred
En-Route
5pm your time?
You can not harm any engine by removing fuel or manifold pressure. all it will do is quit, when too much is removed.
You want to use as low of an RPM as possible - but there is a point where you go so far behind the engine's power curve that you actually shoot yourself in the foot.
Unless you manage to get into a zone of detonation (removing fuel).
You can not cause detonation by removing fuel, it is impossible.
Keep in mind that you also need to consider torsional vibrations and propeller stresses. Running at too low of an RPM and too high of a manifold pressure will cause significant stresses on the crankshaft and propeller for certain engines and certain propellers. This doesn't mean you need to operate at or below "square." There are no shortage of engines that are very happy operating with a higher MP than RPM. However, my Aztec as an example has manifold pressure restrictions at or below 2200 RPM. I don't know what the 182 has, check the POH.
Unless you manage to get into a zone of detonation (removing fuel).
Keep in mind that you also need to consider torsional vibrations and propeller stresses. Running at too low of an RPM and too high of a manifold pressure will cause significant stresses on the crankshaft and propeller for certain engines and certain propellers. This doesn't mean you need to operate at or below "square." There are no shortage of engines that are very happy operating with a higher MP than RPM. However, my Aztec as an example has manifold pressure restrictions at or below 2200 RPM. I don't know what the 182 has, check the POH.
I know that I got a chuckle when a CFI asked me when I was going to square up to 25/25 for climb, my response was to tap the redline on the tach (2400)My POH charts acceptable combination at 2000 rpm anywhere from 18" MP to 28" mp, so I don't know how this "square" comes into play on this one...
I haven't taken it out to make notes yet.
You can not cause detonation by removing fuel, it is impossible.
My POH charts acceptable combination at 2000 rpm anywhere from 18" MP to 28" mp, so I don't know how this "square" comes into play on this one...
I haven't taken it out to make notes yet.
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As I've told you before when you've made this claim, go try that on a Navajo at climb power and tell me what happens. Yes, by leaning the mixture on certain piston engines you do have a concern about getting into a detonation zone. Keep leaning you'll get out of it, the question is where, and whether the engine has good enough mixture distribution to run that lean.
Point is that there's an OWT about engines needing to be "square" or below for safe operation, which is not true.