roundout
VNAV monitor
I'm "lucky" enough to have time in both the 145 and 200.
My first leg of IOE in the 145 we were filed for 370. At about 290 and .56M (our profile) I grew concerned. I asked the check airman "why isn't the red tape showing at the bottom of the air speed tape?" He responded "we aren't even close to the stall speed. You rarely see the stall red line in the climb."
After logging over 900 hours in the 200 I was shocked. After FL250 in the 200 you'd begin to really pucker up and pay attention.
The 145 will climb at .56 all the way to 37000' with no issue, and the. Accelerate to .74+ with no problem.
Maybe on a ferry flight. If you climb in FLC at 270->.56 anything over about 41k you will be seeing 10 degrees pitch up with climb rates less than 500fpm once you get in to the high 20s. If you ever make it to altitude, it takes the thing half an hour to accelerate. It's a very, very foolish way to operate.
Airline flying is about minimizing exposure to risk. Flying a jet that slow at that altitude exposes your crew, passengers, and jet to an undeserved (and unnecessary) level of risk. In my humble eyes, FLC is dangerous above about FL270 on an average day. If you're on OT or are trying to over block, climb at .65 then cruise at LRC. Much safer.