Martymccasland
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2011
- Messages
- 205
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M.McCasland
Many places I come across advise to lean/reduce power if you have a tail-wind but just go ROP and hammer if you have a head-wind? The latest occurring this morning in an aviation article on AvWeb. My CFI, other very good pilot friends say the same. But I just don't see the light.
What is the thinking behind this?
If I run LOP, my TAS drops from 168-170 to 157-159, my fuel burn drops 3-5gph, my range is improved (not to mention the engine is very nice and cool -- which is a safety and long-term maintenance money saving item to me).
Why would I give that up in a headwind? Unless the trip is short, the headwind is going to reduce my range anyway. Running WOT and ROP is going to reduce it even more -- likely requiring a fuel stop on a longer flight. Running 65-70% LOP is just going to put you a few minutes behind the fire-breathing plane going flat-out up ahead -- and is very likely going to allow you to keep flying when the faster plane stops for fuel. Even if the fast plane was able to go 100 knots faster by running WOT/ROP, the slower plane is going to beat them unless the next leg is extremely long.
Example: on a 480nm trip right now with a 21 knot headwind component, running LOP makes the trip 3:43 mins at 44.6 gallons. Running wide-open ROP makes it 3:27 at 56 gallons. To me the fact that there is a headwind or tailwind is irrelevant. If anything, a huge headwind makes the case for easing up, burning less, forgoing a stop. And we're only talking 15 minutes over nearly 500nm.
What am I missing?
What is the thinking behind this?
If I run LOP, my TAS drops from 168-170 to 157-159, my fuel burn drops 3-5gph, my range is improved (not to mention the engine is very nice and cool -- which is a safety and long-term maintenance money saving item to me).
Why would I give that up in a headwind? Unless the trip is short, the headwind is going to reduce my range anyway. Running WOT and ROP is going to reduce it even more -- likely requiring a fuel stop on a longer flight. Running 65-70% LOP is just going to put you a few minutes behind the fire-breathing plane going flat-out up ahead -- and is very likely going to allow you to keep flying when the faster plane stops for fuel. Even if the fast plane was able to go 100 knots faster by running WOT/ROP, the slower plane is going to beat them unless the next leg is extremely long.
Example: on a 480nm trip right now with a 21 knot headwind component, running LOP makes the trip 3:43 mins at 44.6 gallons. Running wide-open ROP makes it 3:27 at 56 gallons. To me the fact that there is a headwind or tailwind is irrelevant. If anything, a huge headwind makes the case for easing up, burning less, forgoing a stop. And we're only talking 15 minutes over nearly 500nm.
What am I missing?