bunk22
Well-Known Member
An autofeather system is exactly what it sounds like, it automatically feathers the prop when engine torque output drops below a certain level with the power levels advanced to near full power (example numbers: <400 ftlbs torque with power levers >90% forward). It is used on free turbines because once the prop is feathered, the starter can still motor the engine in order to air-start it if you discover why it shut down and remedy the problem. This is because the prop is not physically attached to the engine and therefore will not slow the engine's acceleration during start up.
A Negative Torque Sensing System (NTS) is exactly what it sounds like. Positive torque = engine driving the prop (normal), Negative torque = engine output so low that the relative wind's windmilling force turns the prop faster than the engine does (power idle, high speed descent or when you lose an engine). The NTS system senses torque and when it sense a negative torque condition (engine failure), it will move the prop TOWARD a feather (more course blade angle = slower prop RPM = less windmilling force from the wind = less negative torque). As a person said above, the NTS system does NOT FULLY Feather the prop. It will slow the prop down to about "Light Off" RPM (example: around 5-10% RPM) because that little residual windmilling motion allows for the MINIMUM drag on that side while still allowing the pilot to perform an air-start.
To air-start a free turbine, you simple...do the same thing as on the ground. In a direct drive turboprop, the prop is spun as the engine accelerates. If the prop is fully feathered, it will be near impossible for the engine to accelerate properly. On the Fairchild Metroliner (SA227) with Garret TPE331 direct drive engines, the engine start button's function changes in the air. A squat switch changes the start button from activating the starter (ground) to running the unfeather pump (air) thus removing the starter from even trying to crank over the engine in the air.
Good explanation. When I flew C-2A's, the prop system was the most difficult system to understand and explain. The E-2/C-2 have those big ass props hanging out there with 5200shp or 4,600shp respectively.