Yep.John Herreshoff said:Cowl flaps are located on the bottom of the cowling. They are doors that you can open to control the cooling of the engine. I.E. You keep cowl flaps open during climb in most situations so you have additional cooling of the engine when it's operating at high RPM and high temps. When you get up to cruise you'll close them up because the engine is running cooler and they pretty much act as speed brakes.
Depends, I think. Some of the 400 series Cessnas it can mean quite a few knots of airspeed - not inconsequential if you have a long flight.tonyw said:So, old wive's tale or no.
I was told that if you leave 'em open during cruise, it's not a good thing, but there's not a huge penalty to this.
We often leave them closed on approach and landing to help control engine cooling rates. Just gotta remember to run the appropriate check list and open 'em back up if you do a go-around or aborted landing.However, you definitely need to remember to make sure they are open on take off and landing.
tonyw said:However, you definitely need to remember to make sure they are open on take off and landing.
tonyw said:I was told that if you leave 'em open during cruise, it's not a good thing, but there's not a huge penalty to this.
However, you definitely need to remember to make sure they are open on take off and landing.
tonyw said:I was told that if you leave 'em open during cruise, it's not a good thing, but there's not a huge penalty to this.
tonyw said:So, old wive's tale or no.
I was told that if you leave 'em open during cruise, it's not a good thing, but there's not a huge penalty to this.
However, you definitely need to remember to make sure they are open on take off and landing.
hattrick said:every complex airplane ive flown has them just wondering what doesnt
KBUF said:Here in buf, it gets COLD...so sometimes, on extra cold days, I'll leave the cowl flaps closed or only partially open on take off until the CHT gets about mid-range in the green. Sometimes, when cruising at low altitudes (short climb), I never open them. Basically, I monitor the CHT instead of always open and close them at specific phases of flight.
USMCmech said:Ditto all of the above with one exception.
Always open your cowl flaps when on the ground, even in Antartica.
On the ground with the cowl flaps closed there is no airflow through the engine. Air is NOT forced in by the propeler, it is sucked out by the airflow around the cowling. The open cowl flaps create a low pressure area which draws the hot air out of the engine compartment.
Running with zero airflow to cool the engine for even a few minutes can create localized hot spots damageing to the engine, regardless of what the CHT guage says.