First, I'm going to echo the comments above... especially given the circumstances you describe. Even with the experience you have in your aircraft it's always worth taking A CFI on-board periodically, especially while you explore new features or procedures that you're not as familiar with.
Getting my IR now. He thinks it's dumb to burn gas I don't have to, but it simplifies operation and doesn't appear to be hurting anything. For example, 90kts level is '22" gear down, flaps half". 500fpm, 90kts is same thing, 17".
btw, you don't mention which Mooney you have, I just pulled a POH online for an M20J, which has the recommended Op Procedure for a cruise climb of 26/2600. There are prescriptions in the POH, not just options.
1981 'J'. I'll check mine and post it (I have it scanned, but not with me). "recommended", though, isn't a prohibition. If it makes any difference, I'm one of the few with the IO390 upgrade. But the manual for that says all POH numbers still apply, so probably doesn't make a difference.
2. Noise - Even if you're wearing an ANR headset, those on the ground are not. There's quite a difference to the noise footprint.
Good point. So, lowering rpms near an airport, for example, would be a good thing.
3. Vibration - ANR headsets can help reduce the noise, but vibration is also a big cause of fatigue, lower RPMs reduce the vibration
My instructor was motivated to get his prop balanced after flying my airplane. I won't take credit for it, but whoever had it before me had a REALLY good prop balance done.
4. Speed control - I've not flown a Mooney in a while, but in my current plane I'd find it impossible to fly at the speed needed for turbulent air penetration, remain in the green arc for the decent and enter the pattern without using the full range of the MP and RPM green arcs.
Are you worried about "shock" cooling? Because (again, teh interwebz are full of contradictions) from what I've read "shock cooling" isn't something I have to worry about unless I'm trying to beat jumpers to the ground. Those guys do apparently run through cylinders like they're disposable. I just close the cowl flaps (if open, close in cruise anyway), throttle back and push over until I get the airspeed I want. In the summer, I stay high until way late and then pop the speed brakes.
I'm sure there are others, but those are ones that spring to mind for me at the moment.
thanks. I'm genuinely interested in learning to fly this airplane better. I do not in any way claim what I do is optimal, just doesn't seem to be hurting anything and gives me what I want.