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Old May 28th 05, 01:17 AM
bill hunter
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What do you normally use in cross country flights? Do you ever run LOP.
I just bought a turbo arrow with a TurboPlus intercooler, and have not
figured out all the nuances yet.
email me at billhunter at yahoo dot com if you have any helpful hints.


"Tauno Voipio" wrote in message
...
O. Sami Saydjari wrote:
I am a little confused about power setting options on my Piper Turbo
Arrow from my power setting table.

Assuming I want 75% power, at Sea Level, I can run it at:
1. 2300 RPM and 34.8 inches manifold pressure
2. 2400 RPM and 33.8 inches
3. 2500 RPM and 32.8 inches
4. 2575 RPM and 31.5 inches

How does one choose between these settings. Are they completely
equivalent? Is one setting easier on the enginer or props than another?
Of course, I could do a whole bunch of experiments, but if someone has a
good rule of thumb and a simple explanation behind it, I sure would
appreciate it.

-Sami
N2057M, Piper Turbo Arrow III


In principle, there are two things to balance:

- the pressure at the engine bearings, and
- the central forces at the prop

High rotational speed means more central forces at the prop.
The forces are proportional to the square of the speed. This
means that 10 % change creates roughly 20 % difference in
forces.

Slow rotational speed means more torque and more pressure
at the engine parts. For the oil film in the bearings there
is a two-fold effect: slower speed pushes less oil into the
contact surface and greater pressure squeezes more oil
out of the contact area.

For normal cruise, I select 2300 rpm and 31 inches, but that
is less than 75 %. I'd use 2400 rpm and 33 inches for 75 %
(although it would be about 31 inches in my Arrow due to
the intercooler).

HTH

--

Tauno Voipio
OH-PYM, Piper Turbo Arrow IV
tauno voipio (at) iki fi