Douglas
Old School KSUX
Intake drag.
...
-mini
Ah, you speak of the best part of my drive home. :bandit:
Intake drag.
...
-mini
Also not sure what you mean by stop-and-go's. Was the pilot landing, stopping on the runway & then taking off again without exiting the runway?
Really, there's no sense in getting worked up about a topic like this on an internet forum.
If you don't understand what he's saying feel free to ask questions to get further clarification.
I think I read on the first page, it's hard to turn the prop through by hand, and likewise is hard to do so in the air.
Not drag, but turning the engine via prop windmill is in essense running a vacume pump, powered by a wind turbine. Unfortunately all you do is turn that energy into heat and noise in the engine. Once the engine stops turning, the only losses are due to drag on the prop, which is minimized when it's feathered. I think we are both in agreement, I was just trying to oversimplify it.Yes, but that still seems to imply it's the drag of the engine sucking the energy from the airframe. Remember that the rate of energy loss isn't due to torque, it's due to torque * RPM. The higher the RPM, the higher the loss of energy per unit time. That's what power is, change of energy per unit time.
On an airplane, rate of climb is maximized when power is maximized, which occurs as the highest RPM. Likewise, the rate of descent during a power off glide is maximized when RPM is the highest. The latter happens when the drag of the engine is as small as possible, just as the maximum RPM of a power on condition occurs when the drag of the prop is as small as possible, low pitch.
With an engine like the PT6, which is a free spool turbine, things are a bit different. With no direct connection to the turbine, an engine failure is detected by the autofeather system which senses a negative torque and automatically drives the prop to feather.
I think we are both in agreement
I'm not sure that is the case.
The frictional loss from the engine.
The airplane does not see frictional forces, it only sees aerodynamic ones. Only the reverse lift vector of the windmilling propeller can have any effect on the airplane. The only use of the frictional forces is determining the equilibrium RPM, which then determines the AoA seen by the blade and hence the reverse thrust. If you want to argue differently, you will have to show a mechanism that connects the internal engine friction to the production of pressure differences around the airplane.
You seem to think I am arguing a point in which I am not.
The frictional loss from the engine, as well as the drag induced from windmilling the prop, or generating negative thrust, in addition to the plan form drag
You said
I was asking you to show how that can affect the pressure differences around the airplane. If you cannot, then you should leave it out of the drag contribution.
Not really adding to the discussion, but I actually flew a variant of the PT-6 that did not have autofeather, and this was a boldface item for engine failure.
I'm merely trying to make sense of... whatever it is you're yammering on about
So then you're saying a C-172 DOES have a thrust reverser when the prop is windmilling?
Wow, just wow.