Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

“Moving on Up” Transitioning to High-Performance Aircraft Peter Long, CFI, CFII, MEI

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "“Moving on Up” Transitioning to High-Performance Aircraft Peter Long, CFI, CFII, MEI"— Presentation transcript:

1 “Moving on Up” Transitioning to High-Performance Aircraft Peter Long, CFI, CFII, MEI plong@outback-aviation.com

2 Agenda ► How much horsepower do I need to fly ! ► Propellers ► Engines and Turbochargers ► Other Considerations ► FAA Rules – just in case ► Questions

3 How much horsepower do I need to fly ? The Wright Flyer – 12 HPThe Cessna 172SP – 180 HP The Cessna Turbo 206 – 310 HP Boeing 747 – 90,000 HP (equivalent) North American P-51 – 1100->1600 HP North American T-28 Trojan – 800 HP

4 Propellers ► Convert engine HP to thrust ► Fixed vs. Constant Speed ► Torque & P-Factor

5 Propellers – Fixed ► Angle of attack varies with airspeed &/or RPM ► Optimized for a single airspeed/RPM ► Therefore it has poorer efficiency other times

6 Propellers – Constant Speed ► Changes blade angle to maintain optimal angle of attack over wide range of airspeed and RPM settings ► More complexity ► Additional cockpit control (propeller)

7 How the whole thing works

8 How the governor works To Prop High RPMLow RPM On RPM Oil By adjusting blade angle, governor maintains optimal AoA and constant engine RPM

9 Changes in airspeed ► Climbing  Airspeed slows  Angle of attack increases  Engine RPM slows  Governor reduces blade angle  Engine RPM recovers  Angle of attack back to optimal

10 Use of Propeller Control ► Power Increase - Mixture, Prop, Throttle ► Power Decrease - Throttle, Prop Mixture Example : T206 ► Takeoff - High RPM Setting, Full Power ► Climb - Set to top of green (MP, RPM, Fuel flow) ► Cruise - Per the POH ► Descent - Reduce Throttle 1 Inch Per Minute ► Landing - Prop High RPM (typically on base)

11 Propellers ► Convert engine HP to thrust ► Fixed vs. Constant Speed ► Torque & P-Factor

12 Propellers – Torque ► Left turning tendency ► Strongest with high power ► Did I say “right rudder”

13 Propellers – P-factor ► Left turning tendency ► Strongest with high  Power  Angles of attack ► Take-off, go-around ► Right rudder !!!!

14 Agenda ► How much horsepower do I need ! ► Propellers ► Engines and Turbochargers ► Other Considerations ► FAA Rules – just in case ► Questions

15 Engine Management ► Bigger engines -> more heat ► Turbochargers -> more heat ► Need to manage CHTs (<400°F)  In the climb – add fuel, reduce fpm  Enroute – cowl flaps, leaning  In the descent – reduce power gradually, keep lean  (Pushing the mixture in generate large changes)

16 Turbochargers ► Uses exhaust gas to drive increase inlet manifold pressure ► Waste gate is key to how much boost ► Modern systems have automatic wastegates To Intake Manifold Exhaust Waste Gate

17 Turbochargers ► Critical altitude is when wastegate is fully closed ► Descent planning ! ► What happens when the turbocharger fails at altitude ?  (Air start checklist) To Intake Manifold Exhaust Waste Gate

18 Other Cool Stuff ► Oxygen or pressurization systems ► Anti-ice, De-ice systems ► Speed brakes ► Weather Radar ► GPS and/or glass panel avionics

19 Agenda ► How much horsepower do I need ! ► Propellers ► Engines and Turbochargers ► Other Considerations ► FAA Rules – just in case ► Questions

20 Speed (I feel the need for …) ► Planning Ahead  Communications  Altitude/Power Changes  Particularly turbo-charged engines ► Longer Takeoff/Landing Distances ► Larger Turn Radius ► Longer Range

21 Weight ► Momentum ► Stability ► Landing (Descent)  Sink rate, use of power ► Landing (Crosswinds)  Weathervaning

22 Read the POH ! ► Section 7 - How Things Work ► Section 9 - How the Other Things Work ► Section 2 - What Can Kill You ► Section 3 - When Things DON’T Work ► Section 4 - Normal Procedures ► Sections 5, 6, and 8

23 Calibrate the Plane ► Power/Flap/Gear Settings/Airspeeds for:  Climb  Cruise  Descent  Hold / approach level  Precision / non-precision approach  Downwind  Base  Final  Go Around

24 Agenda ► How much horsepower do I need ! ► Propellers ► Engines and Turbochargers ► Other Considerations ► FAA Rules – just in case ► Questions

25 FAA Rules ► 61.31 – received and logged ground and flight training one-time endorsement re proficiency ► High-performance endorsement (>200HP) ► Complex endorsement (flaps, wheels, propeller) ► High-altitude endorsement (pressurized, ceiling > 25,000’)

26 Any questions ?

27 West Valley Flying Club ► Over 80 airplanes for rent – SQL, PAO, HWD ► Over 20 high performance planes ► http://www.wvfc.org http://www.wvfc.org ► Come visit us in the terminal building

28 Come outside and play ► N206DW – Cessna T206 turbo 310HP 6 seats ► N4195U – Cessna C182 235 HP 3 high-performance planes from West Valley Flying Club on display

29 Moving on Up Peter Long, CFI, CFII, MEI plong@outback-aviation.com http://www.outback-aviation.com/Seminars.htm (408) 406 7370 Thanks to Dave Fry, Trevor Thom, and the internet…


Download ppt "“Moving on Up” Transitioning to High-Performance Aircraft Peter Long, CFI, CFII, MEI"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google