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#1
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![]() Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...ofileChart.jpg At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? -- Dallas |
#2
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![]() "Dallas" wrote in message ... Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...ofileChart.jpg At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? -- Dallas If you stay at 45%, the climb to altitude takes a looooong time, and you are moving slowly, so the range suffers. I think most CAFE folks have figured out the best thing to do is climb at max power, get to a high altitude quickly, then throttle back at the high altitude to get the max fuel economy. YMMV. Regards, John Severyn KLVK |
#3
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On Jun 8, 1:43 pm, "J. Severyn" wrote:
"Dallas" wrote in message ... Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...RangeProfileCh... At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? -- Dallas If you stay at 45%, the climb to altitude takes a looooong time, and you are moving slowly, so the range suffers. I think most CAFE folks have figured out the best thing to do is climb at max power, get to a high altitude quickly, then throttle back at the high altitude to get the max fuel economy. YMMV. Regards, John Severyn KLVK- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Climb time is not built into that chart because there is no assumption about field elevation. It is simply a cruise performance chart *after* you have climbed to altitude. The reduction in range comes from reduced propeller efficiency at higher altitudes for the same output power. |
#4
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![]() "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... On Jun 8, 1:43 pm, "J. Severyn" wrote: "Dallas" wrote in message ... Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...RangeProfileCh... At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? -- Dallas If you stay at 45%, the climb to altitude takes a looooong time, and you are moving slowly, so the range suffers. I think most CAFE folks have figured out the best thing to do is climb at max power, get to a high altitude quickly, then throttle back at the high altitude to get the max fuel economy. YMMV. Regards, John Severyn KLVK- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Climb time is not built into that chart because there is no assumption about field elevation. It is simply a cruise performance chart *after* you have climbed to altitude. The reduction in range comes from reduced propeller efficiency at higher altitudes for the same output power. Climb time is built into the referenced chart. Note on the referenced photo of the page from the POH: "This chart allows for the fuel used for engine start, taxi, takeoff and climb, and the distance during climb as shown in Figure 5-6." J. Severyn |
#5
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On Fri, 08 Jun 2007 17:26:26 GMT, Dallas
wrote: Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...ofileChart.jpg At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? nothing. your range is not related to speed directly but by fuel use. (not theoretically but in real flying) your engine uses about 20 litres per hour. that is the reality. the size of the fuel tank is what governs the time possible in the air. the other factor which plays with the distance achieved over the time in the air, at the speeds we fly at, more than any other factor, is the wind direction and strength. climb settings built in the graph are almost irrelevant because what you lose in the climb you typically make up in the descent. your idea that higher altitudes are more efficient is bought undone by two aspects of your aircraft. the propeller becomes less efficent with less dense air flowing past it. the engine also becomes less efficient with less dense air going into it. the reduction in density almost exactly undoes the benefits of altitude. turbo charging was developed to remove one of those deficiencies. another thing that I have accidently tested is that the speed that you fly at in our aircraft doesnt affect range. flying slower keeps you aloft for longer but you cover less distance in the time. in my experience the range is near identical at any speed. so what the revelation shows you in the graph is that you should run your engine at max continuous rpm and lean it periodically to max rpm at the throttle setting and get on with enjoying the scenery. none of it actually matters! ...except the wind. what altitude you fly at is actually dictated by the temperature of the day and the amount of humidity in the air. you climb until the air cools almost beyond comfortable provided that the humidity of the day provides clear vision. have you ever realised that at 105knots your aircraft is *always* flying into a 105knot headwind. :-) move the parcel of air that you are flying through across the landscape and sometimes it can help you. (oh we dream of those days) welcome to the real world. it is a lovely, far simpler place than you may have imagined :-) Stealth Pilot |
#6
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On Sat, 09 Jun 2007 04:31:13 +0800, Stealth Pilot wrote:
welcome to the real world. it is a lovely, far simpler place than you may have imagined :-) Thanks... I thoroughly enjoyed that piece. :-) -- Dallas |
#7
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Stealth Pilot wrote:
your range is not related to speed directly but by fuel use. (not theoretically but in real flying) your engine uses about 20 litres per hour. that is the reality. the size of the fuel tank is what governs the time possible in the air. I'm not sure I can explain the OP's question, except to reiterate that the climb IS factored in and at low power settings seems to have a negative effect, but your statement above is just plain incorrect. Speed has a HUGE affect on total range. The Breguet Range equation states that the range will be greatest when flying at the Max L/D speed (which generally tends to be a lot slower than most folks fly, and which decreases as the GW lowers as we burn fuel). I've verified with my fuel flow gauge, hooked into my GPS, that my MPG is far higher at 100 mph (about best L/D for my COZY MKIV) than it is at 200 mph (my normal cruise speed). It would take me a lot longer than I want to get somewhere at that speed, but I'd use less gas getting there, and my total range to "tanks dry" is far higher at 100 mph than it is at 200 mph. Like 40% higher - 1400 NM vs 1000 NM. the other factor which plays with the distance achieved over the time in the air, at the speeds we fly at, more than any other factor, is the wind direction and strength. Obviously. We're talking no wind here. Speed up in a headwind, and slow down with a tailwind to maximize range. climb settings built in the graph are almost irrelevant because what you lose in the climb you typically make up in the descent. Due to entropy, you NEVER make up in the descent what you lose in the climb. your idea that higher altitudes are more efficient is bought undone by two aspects of your aircraft. the propeller becomes less efficent with less dense air flowing past it. the engine also becomes less efficient with less dense air going into it. the reduction in density almost exactly undoes the benefits of altitude. I have no idea where you're getting these ideas. Do you have any references? Propellers are designed for a given cruise condition - mine was optimized for 8K ft. altitudes and about 200-210 mph cruise. The engine is not less EFFICIENT at higher altitudes - it just puts out less power. In fact, since I can run LOP when below 75% power at altitude, I am far MORE efficient at altitude than I am down low. For a non-turbocharged piston engine aircraft, you will get the most efficiency when flying at the highest altitude at which your engine can put out the amount of power you want to use. If you want to use 75% power, you want to fly at 7000-8000 ft. If you want to use 55% power, you want to fly at 12K ft. Obviously, for short trips (for me, anything less than an hour), it's not worth the climb, but for long trips, you use far less fuel at higher altitudes. If you take a look at aircraft such as the Voyager, and examine the altitudes and speeds that were used to maximize the range (hence efficiency), you'll see that these things are the case. turbo charging was developed to remove one of those deficiencies. Turbo charging increases the altitude at which a given power output can be produced, therefore increasing speed. another thing that I have accidently tested is that the speed that you fly at in our aircraft doesnt affect range. flying slower keeps you aloft for longer but you cover less distance in the time. in my experience the range is near identical at any speed. Then you haven't completed the experimentation. It most certainly does NOT balance. Again, review the history of aircraft built for range, and look at what speeds they fly at, and what altitudes they fly at. Review the L/D curves for the aircraft in question, and the speed to maximize range will jump out at you. welcome to the real world. it is a lovely, far simpler place than you may have imagined :-) While lovely, it's only simple if you don't want to understand it :-). -- Marc J. Zeitlin http://www.cozybuilders.org/ Copyright (c) 2007 |
#8
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On Jun 8, 2:09 pm, "J. Severyn" wrote:
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... On Jun 8, 1:43 pm, "J. Severyn" wrote: "Dallas" wrote in message . .. Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...RangeProfileCh... At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? -- Dallas If you stay at 45%, the climb to altitude takes a looooong time, and you are moving slowly, so the range suffers. I think most CAFE folks have figured out the best thing to do is climb at max power, get to a high altitude quickly, then throttle back at the high altitude to get the max fuel economy. YMMV. Regards, John Severyn KLVK- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Climb time is not built into that chart because there is no assumption about field elevation. It is simply a cruise performance chart *after* you have climbed to altitude. The reduction in range comes from reduced propeller efficiency at higher altitudes for the same output power. Climb time is built into the referenced chart. Note on the referenced photo of the page from the POH: "This chart allows for the fuel used for engine start, taxi, takeoff and climb, and the distance during climb as shown in Figure 5-6." J. Severyn- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are correct; I missed that part. Fig 5-6 shows climb performance for climbing from sealevel to the designated altitude. So how does one figure out the range when departing from a high elevation airport? |
#9
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![]() "Dallas" wrote in message ... Am I reading this graph incorrectly? http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...ofileChart.jpg At the 45% power setting, the best range for a Cessna 150M would be achieved by flying anywhere from sea level to a maximum of 1,800 feet? At 75% power the gain is about 2.5 NM of range by flying at 7,000 feet vs. 1,000 feet. This pretty much trashes my fundamental belief that higher altitudes give greater range. What am I missing? Wind -- Dallas |
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