Check the rans site. The new s20 is very close.
Flight Design CT's can if the prop is pitched right. Mine is much more comfortable and fuel efficient at 100-110 knots though.
How is your prop pitched? The "wisdom of the CT gurus" is that you pitch it to get 5600-5700rpm at WOT straight and level at your normal cruise altitude. This gets the airplane capable of maximum horsepower and improves both climb and performance over the too-coarse factory settings. I gained both cruise speed and climb (almost 300fpm!) doing this.
My plane cruises 114 knots at 5200rpm and 124 knots WOT at 4000 feet. I climb at 1200fpm solo and 900fpm near gross weight.
The reason I ask is I'm wondering if at 110kt you are cruising at 4600-4800rpm. There are some harsh harmonics at that RPM that can increase wear on the engine. It does better at 5000rpm plus, and the 912 was designed to live its entire 2000 hour life at 5500rpm, so you won't hurt it doing this.
Not trying to tell you how to operate your airplane, just passing along what I have learned from people who know CTs and Rotax engines much better than I ever will.
Roger Heller and I have had this discussion for years. I'm turning around 5100 rpm at full throttle cruise. I've played around with the prop pitch a couple of times and this seems to work good for me. I might try taking out another degree at the next annual, but my mechanic (rotax trained at the factory in Austria) says I'm not hurting anything.
Roger Heller and I have had this discussion for years. I'm turning around 5100 rpm at full throttle cruise. I've played around with the prop pitch a couple of times and this seems to work good for me. I might try taking out another degree at the next annual, but my mechanic (rotax trained at the factory in Austria) says I'm not hurting anything.
4600-4800rpm. There are some harsh harmonics at that RPM that can increase wear on the engine.
This is one of Roger's mantras but if you go into the documentation and check the various RPM at various pitch settings and get it right I don't think this holds true.
Europeans pitch the 912 differently and seem to get along fine.
Europeans are allowed to fly variable pitch props with their 912s in the same CTs and GXes.Europeans pitch the 912 differently and seem to get along fine.
Europeans are allowed to fly variable pitch props with their 912s in the same CTs and GXes.
Of course. And they fly them at different WOT RPM settings than many in the U.S. preach. Thus the discussion about a harmonic zone that may be more fiction than fact.