1RTK1
Pattern Altitude
Didn’t cut off the last sentence on purpose, thought I copied it all.
Yes there is:
You know you are in governing range if you turn the prop knob out and you get an rpm drop.
And if you get an rpm drop, when you pulled the prop knob out, you know you are now NOT at the stops.
Stop thinking you know the answer to this puzzle (that it is on the stops and there can't be any lag in governing rpm), open your mind, sharpen your senses, and just go out and do a runup with the prop knob pulled a bit so you KNOW you arent on the stops,
What people have a misunderstanding of if they think at runup, 1800-1900 rpm or so, is they think if the prop knob is all the way in that the prop is at the stops, fully flat.
You can proove you are NOT on the stops by backing the prop knob off a bit, seeing an rpm drop, so you know you are in governing range, and doing the runup from that configuration. Because the prop knob has reduced rpm, you KNOW that the prop is not full flat from there.
And if you get an rpm drop from the lag at runup, you get it in the air at cruise power, though it is less noticable at higher power. This technique gives pilots a way to lean without having full instrumentation and balanced fuel injectors. It also gives the pilot a way to lean at runup when you need it at high altitudes.
I know there is nothing wrong with my prop or governor. Its a Lycoming 0-360 with a Marvel Schebler carburetor and a Hartzel constant speed prop. And other aircraft exhibit the same behavior.
Control systems always have a delay. Nothing happens instantaneously. It takes time for the governor to adjust the blade angle to keep the rpms steady when there is a change in power, whether the change in power is from the mixture or the throttle.
By making the valve a smaller opening the designer can increase the delay. The increase in delay makes the rpm drop noticable, which you want so you can lean the engine by watching for an rpm drop, then richen it slightly.
Kent,
You are wasting electrons. If somebody doesn't understand the system you can't explain to them why it doesn't work. They need remedial education before you can try to explain it to them.
Boy, now I know what Galileo must have felt like.
Now go out and drop two balls of the same size, one made of lead and the other made of copper...
This is easy people, just to out and conduct two experiments.
1. Do a runup, but pull the prop back a bit so you know its not on the stops
2. Observe what happens to the rpms when you pull the mixture back.
Then in cruise at less that full throttle, say 20"/2000 or some other economy cruise setting
1. Pull the mixture knob back
2. Immediately observe what happens to the rpms when you pull the mixture back
Now, at economy cruise setting
1. Pull the THROTTLE back, not all the way but more than a little
2. Immediately observe what happens to the rpms when you pull the throttle back
Write your results down on paper. You know, its an experiment.
Half as fast, it takes longer to change rpm with the larger mass.....and what if there are four or five blades.....would this happen twice as fast?
Thanks!Husky with a carburetor Lycoming 0360, Hartzel prop, marvel schebler carb. Same as Mooney Nov and others
Think about it. If you lean it enough, the rpms gotta go down. Th extreme case where do rpms go when you pull the mixture to cutoff?
mine doesn't change all that slow....compared with what I use to have. Now with cold oil?....that's a pot of a different kettle.Half as fast, it takes longer to change rpm with the larger mass.
That’s what you get for using that cold oil stuff. I use hot oil in mine. Most FBOs don’t stock it so ya gotta order it from the distributor.mine doesn't change all that slow....compared with what I use to have. Now with cold oil?....that's a pot of a different kettle.
Husky with a carburetor Lycoming 0360, Hartzel prop, marvel schebler carb. Same as Mooney and others
Think about it. If you lean it enough, the rpms gotta go down. In the extreme case where do rpms go when you pull the mixture to cutoff?
Of course you don't pull it nearly that far. Do it at economy cruise and it stays well within the governing range. Just enough rpm drop to notice it.
That’s what you get for using that cold oil stuff. I use hot oil in mine. Most FBOs don’t stock it so ya gotta order it from the distributor.
This is easy people, just to out and conduct two experiments.
1. Do a runup, but pull the prop back a bit so you know its not on the stops
2. Observe what happens to the rpms when you pull the mixture back.
There's no way I'm clicking that link.Amazon sells it. LOL https://www.amazon.com/Dynasty-Hot-...=UTF8&qid=1525719906&sr=8-13&keywords=hot+oil
(Now I'm going to be getting ads for that stuff for the next year.)
It was for a hot chili sauce.There's no way I'm clicking that link.
There's no way I'm clicking that link.
How do I get full power if I have pulled the prop off the stops? And since when do we do full power run-ups?
TLR yeah, the schools do full power run ups. No one else does.Many here at altitude recommend them, but most of us find them fairly useless below about 10,000 DA since normal leaning at RPM settings that don’t suck crap into the prop are plenty close enough on carb’d engines where the carb is going to enrichen at full throttle anyway. Way easier to see where the peak really is.
(I think where this is falling apart is @coloradoblueskies assumes peak is at the point where power falls off, but it’s slightly richer than that. If you want to SEE it on the RPM gauge and get it dead nuts on peak, you can’t do it at full RPM. It’s simply not possible. The prop will start to adjust as it goes up in tiny increments and then RPM will fall when you “go over the cliff” onto the overly lean side.)
You do need to be above the altitude where the engine CAN’T produce more than 65% power before there’s any point to a full power run-up if you’re planning on departing at peak lean. Otherwise you’re flirting with pre-ignition.
All you’ll manage to squeak out of it is what you’re going for, and if you’re planning a departure so tight that you’re going to smack the trees with a few percent of power loss either way (lean or rich) you planned badly anyway.
Offload some crap or wait for it to get cooler. It’s a fools errand to lean for absolute peak if it means you won’t clear an obstacle or need that extra 20 RPM unless you’re already so hot and high that peak operation won’t matter at all, and you’ve already lost 35%+ of engine power.
And really you can get it close enough prior to taking the runway that you can just advance the throttle and hold brakes and then lean to the drop and back in for smooth ops and that’s all you’re really going to get out of that engine today anyway, in practical operating terms.
(Doesn’t matter if it’s a constant speed or not, smooth operation just above where it’s dropping off in power is close enough to peak, and you’re not going to harm anything at 65% power or less anyway.)
Pick your abort point and stick to it, after that.
We rarely see problems with visitors who did SOME sort of leaning process, as long as they stay on the slightly rich side of things if it’s cold out, we see problems with people trying to take off full rich and losing tens of percent more engine performance than they expected and NOT having done takeoff calculations nor picked an abort point. They just wait and wait and wait and maybe abort late or mush it into the air barely flying and then maybe remember to crank that mixture out and get a nice surge of power when they finally do.
Dancing on the head of a pin for 20 RPM just doesn’t matter in any practical sense.
But I know YOU know that. Was just starting with the concept that some DO full power run-ups up here. I’ll do it like I said as a final check that I’m “close enough” on the runway at KLXV or on a 100F day down here in the Front Range, but at KLXV we’re talking reasonable temperatures.
Down here if I’m doing it, CHTs are going to severely limit the climb out anyway at 100F on the surface. Other things become the limits besides leaning. 100F is just hard on things here.
TLR yeah, the schools do full power run ups. No one else does.
I took a flight recently with an instructor in a 182. I found peak rpm then announced the five half turn standard for best power. Instructor quickly said two half turns. On take off the instructor added three half turns because the temps were high. I just smdh. It isn’t rocket surgery...My school didn’t, but then again the airplane owner is an A&P/AI and doesn’t like beating hell out of equipment for no practical reason.
I think the era of that is waning amongst CFIs I’ve talked to at the local rent-a-wreck flight schools too. It comes and goes.
Some idiot starts it during the hot of the summer and then it sticks around until they leave for an airline or something. LOL.
Manual reference?Take a look at what LYCOMING says, its essentially saying the same thing I am saying which is lean to an rpm drop (some call it a "stumble") then richen to peak RPM! RPM! Right from Lycoming.
LYCOMING SAYETH:
"For direct-drive and for normally aspirated engines with a prop governor, but without fuel flow or EGT, set throttle at full power and lean mixture at maximum RPM"
You find too lean, then richen to peak.
Just go out and try it. It works!
I took a flight recently with an instructor in a 182. I found peak rpm then announced the five half turn standard for best power. Instructor quickly said two half turns. On take off the instructor added three half turns because the temps were high. I just smdh. It isn’t rocket surgery...
Take a look at what LYCOMING says, its essentially saying the same thing I am saying which is lean to an rpm drop (some call it a "stumble") then richen to peak RPM! RPM! Right from Lycoming.
LYCOMING SAYETH:
"For direct-drive and for normally aspirated engines with a prop governor, but without fuel flow or EGT, set throttle at full power and lean mixture at maximum RPM"
You find too lean, then richen to peak.
Just go out and try it. It works!