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#11
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#12
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#13
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#14
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![]() thank you, george. I am a relatively new pilot, and am just beginning to find the physics here interesting. I also had not thought about the fact that it is the power, rather than the throttle setting, that determines the fuel mixture. but it makes perfect sense. (it still leaves my question of whether there is an altitude that maximizes GS [TAS on a no-wind day] and why, but I guess this is not as constant as I had thought and/or also in this 6000-8000' vicinity.) here is another dumb question, and this is almost off topic. presume we have an experimental, so I can experiment ;-). making air denser should not be a big problem. well, I can't have my passengers blow into a tube, but presumably any air pump increases air density. Even a funnel shaped cowling should create more air to be breathed by an engine flying at speed. Would relying on such cost more power in added drag than it would create through making the engine breathe better? [I looked at the prices of turbo normalizers and they seem upward of $25,000---about the price of a Honda Accord. Ouhh! Maybe this is because they use exhaust heat as the source of power?!] hope I am not taking up too much airtime, and I am not the only one curious. /iaw |
#15
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What you are talking about is "ram air". And it works, but only
slightly. The problem is the air drag created by a large funnel will negate any increase in power. Also, to use that much air, you have to use more fuel. But ram air is for real and most planes intake their air from the front, right behind the prop, right where it is optimum. You get a slight increase in air pressure from such an arrangement. But you can't do it if you increase drag as well. A very large funnel (larger than the nose of the aircraft) would create so much drag, the plane would not go as fast. It would make more power, and consume more fuel, but the power created could not overcome the drag created. |
#16
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![]() ram air, hmmm---I guess this is what I suspected. ram air would have been too easy. except the part that I would also need more fuel. I thought there was an efficiency loss due to not enough air, of course counterbalanced by the fact that I can lean the mixture. I presume there are no (bicycle or) other pumps that are both affordable and that could do a decent job (aid efficiency a lot more than they reduce it). it seems odd for our engines to remain essentially oxygen starved, or to have a turbo which costs $20k and seems to cause all sorts of reliability problems on top of it. one would think there could be low-priced ways to help the situation at least a little. but such is life... thanks for all the info. regards, /iaw |
#17
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![]() wrote in message ps.com... I presume there are no (bicycle or) other pumps that are both affordable and that could do a decent job (aid efficiency a lot more than they reduce it). There are lots of pumps that can pressurize the intake on an engine, they are generally large and take a lot of power to operate which is what you would expect when you consider the amount of air being compressed. A small pump (like a turbo) will have to operate very rapidly (~100,000rpm) and won't be cheap while a large pump will not have to operate very fast but will be heavy. it seems odd for our engines to remain essentially oxygen starved, or to have a turbo which costs $20k and seems to cause all sorts of reliability problems on top of it. All engines can be considered to be "oxygen starved" since an engine operating on pure O2 will produce about twice the power of one operating on air. The turbosupercharger is an efficient (over 70%) pump that uses energy that is normally wasted to operate. The turbo is very reliable, most the problems attributed to turbos are more a function of trying to operate the engine at high altitudes and high power where it is difficult to cool the cylinders. Mike MU-2 |
#18
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michael--I find it hard to believe that even
highest available cruise for short periods would be ground level. the air resistance is pretty high down there. Nevertheless, it is so. The highest available speed is always at the highest altitude where the engine can make full power. For an engine that is air-limited (which is almost ever normally aspirated engine) that is sea level. For engines that are power limited - meaning turbocharged with a flat rating - it's the maximum altitude where the maximum allowable manifold pressure can just be attained. Michael |
#19
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![]() "Michael" wrote in message oups.com... michael--I find it hard to believe that even highest available cruise for short periods would be ground level. the air resistance is pretty high down there. Nevertheless, it is so. The highest available speed is always at the highest altitude where the engine can make full power. For an engine that is air-limited (which is almost ever normally aspirated engine) that is sea level. For engines that are power limited - meaning turbocharged with a flat rating - it's the maximum altitude where the maximum allowable manifold pressure can just be attained. Michael This isn't always true. The MU-2 reaches maximium TAS at the altitude where the engines can produce approximately 90% power. No idea of why. Mike MU-2 |
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