Cessnaflyer
Wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
My next flight is Friday, 1/2 Part 91 so I'll give it a try. Although I'll have to keep it at 4,000 to try out the 26".
Yes real numbers!
I love experimentation!
My next flight is Friday, 1/2 Part 91 so I'll give it a try. Although I'll have to keep it at 4,000 to try out the 26".
I'm not yet convinced of your contention that 1" = 100 RPM. Do you have more charts available that support your thesis?
Can we both be right? and both be retarded?
Hey man, I have never claimed to be a genius.:crazy: But I do know that I don't know all that much.
Man, you guys are throwing around different efficiencies here. Volumetric Efficiency is a very very different story than Thermal Efficiency. Now I could be completely wrong in this, but I'm not exactly sure that thermal efficiency is pertinent to the over square question at hand. The reason I say that is because the real concern about operating at a high MP isn't necessarily the pressure in the manifold, but instead the cylinder pressure.
The quick and dirty, in my view, is that the argument revolves around operating a high MP with low RPM which results in a higher cylinder pressure working against a greater resistance. The reason I say volumetric efficiency is pertinent is because with higher VE, more air can be introduced to the cylinder. With more air, more fuel can be added to create a larger burn, and therefore more cylinder pressure. Thermal efficiency doesn't really come much into play for building cylinder pressure, or at least in my understanding.
Oh, and by the way, automotive VEs greater than 100 can be reached N/A.![]()
Tgray: does that graph on the left take into account engine propeller efficiency?
No. BHP never takes into account propeller efficiency, only THP does that. I would expect that propeller efficiency would be variable all along the x-axis on both charts. For the right one, as you reduce MP, you're reducing torque; how else can the governor maintain RPM other than by reducing the blade angle and hence changing efficiency?
As for the greater cyl pressure debate, I have to just shake my head at that one. It takes so much pressure to bend metal in an engine, that running oversquare values of 1900rpm and 50" of MP still will not bend metal. The problem more or less lies in the direct corilation of pressure=heat. Your typical light GA engine will not be hurt by running oversquare within resonable limits. Also, as RPM changes, so does VE(lower RPM's = lower VE). The engines are desgined to be at their optimum VE at max RPM. So running an engine that has a redline of 2700rpm at 2200rpm, the BE would decrease by a large enough amount to reduce VE low enough to not hurt things. It is eaiser to bend a con rod by over speeding the engine than by running lowRPM/highMP. But it is eaiser to overheat an engine with lowRPM/highMP's. I would be more worried about detonating the thing than bending something. And properly set up, and monitered closely, you will have nothing to worry about.
Wow I just want to smack myself for not thinking that
I have been under the impression that the intake manifold is what limits the difference in MP/RPM because it isn't made as strong as things like the cylinders.
The stress on the intake manifold is highest a IDLE, not full power.
Think of your intake manifold like a straw. Sucking in with nothing blocking the end prdouces no stress, block the end with your finger (or a throttle vlave) causes it to collapse.
What are they concerned with keeping safe as MP/RPM spread increases and how does this link with different engine powers having different MP/RPM spread limits?
I've seen people with GamiInjectors on their BE35 lean it way out and blow out rings all the time.
They're not doing it right if that's the outcome.
I'm not too smart so I'll just insert this excerpt from a DA40 POH. The first time I went for about a 2000/25" combo on an XC with an ATP instructor, he about pooped. I just wanted to see what the engine sounded like.
Detonation limits, I believe. Reducing RPM increases BMEP (brake mean effective pressure) in the cylinders. As for why it varies from engine to engine, displacement does appear in the formulas, with larger engines tending to reduce the increase in BMEP produced by RPM decreases. Also, compression ratios probably have a role, with higher compression engines having a greater propensity to detonate.
So thats the culprit?!?!? Those ATP guys teach you that you must be squared?
Okay here is the info that you all been waiting for.
4,000 feet
MP / RPM TAS FUEL
22 / 24 154 92 lb/hr
23 / 23 156 89
24 / 22 158 83
25 / 21 155 80
26 / 20 145 75
6,000 feet
MP / RPM TAS FUEL
22 / 24 166 90 lb/hr
23 / 23 167 87
24 / 22 161 81
25 / 21 156 77
26 / 20 --- --
remind me again, but those are book power settings too right?
nice data![]()