FlySince9
En-Route
PFM, Porsche F-ing Mooney, real POS, you couldn't make power with the thing.
GEEEZ I can see the veins in your neck... Calm down
They don't sell Edsels anymore, either...
PFM, Porsche F-ing Mooney, real POS, you couldn't make power with the thing.
GEEEZ I can see the veins in your neck... Calm down
They don't sell Edsels anymore, either...
He's not anybody, he's a mechanical engineer and this is mechanical engineer 101 stuff in my opinion, it's basically 150 year old technology, I would think a degreed mechanical engineer would have enough education that they would be able to work the system out by looking at it. There's only one way to do this mechanically really.
Let's go one step at a time. MP is a bit of misnomer, IMO, because in a non-turbo, there never is higher pressure in the intake manifold than atmospheric. So the MP is measuring atmospheric pressure when the engine is off and can be used as a rough altimeter even (1" per 1000' so would read 25" at 5000' pressure altitude). Once you start the engine, the engine acts as a vacuum pump against the throttle valve and generates partial vacuum in the manifold. If there were a perfect vacuum the MP would read 0" but there is not so it reads, what, 10" at idle? As you add power, you open the throttle and kill the vacuum more and more, causing the MP to rise. Under full open throttle, the MP would again approach the atmospheric pressure of 30" Hg.
So MP is an indication of how far open the throttle valve is and the load on the engine.
Henning,
I think we got off on the wrong foot. I am sorry I came across as some "hayseed hick."
That's why they call it MAP not MP, Manifold Absolute Pressure. There is no such thing as a perfect "0" pressure with in the atmosphere, so there are only minus or positive pressures.
I think it works both ways, the scary part to me was if a degreed engineer can forget this stuff which I know he learned, WTF is gonna happen to me? Glasses this year, what next? lol
Thanks for understanding.
Terry