
August 3rd 03, 01:01 PM
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You're right. My brain immediately converted Feathering Prop to a
Constant Speed prop... My mistake, sorry.
(journeyman) wrote in
u.com:
On Sat, 02 Aug 2003 12:13:05 GMT, Judah wrote:
It's even possible for a student working on his PPL to fly a plane with
a constant speed prop. At the flight school where I got my PPL, they
had a couple of Socata Tampicos and a Tobago. If the tampicos were tied
up, students could rent the tobago for training, and the instructor
would work
the prop control. I did that several times in my training.
I've flown a Tobago. I *know* it doesn't have a feathering prop.
Controllable prop doesn't mean feathering prop.
I know, I know, I introduced fixed pitch into the discussion, but, as I
said, that was going overboard.
Sure, as Big John points out, when training for the military, they put
you into single-engine turboprop "trainers" which have feathering
props, but for most of the rest of us, our initial training is in
single-engine pistons. Most likely fixed pitch, but even the ones with
constant-speed props don't feather.
Morris (going into Emily Latella mode)
"Nevermind"
Morris
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