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#1
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We have acquired a 260 hp Pawnee for a towplane and was wondering what
others are doing for cool down after the sailplane releases... Thanks, Tim Hanke Adirondack Soaring Group Saratoga Springs, NY |
#2
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The following has worked at Skylark North in Tehachapi for around 30
years and was policy at Estrella when Horvath owned it: Upon release, smoothly increase airspeed to around rough air redline (120 mph, 100 kts indicated) while smoothly reducng power to remain at about 2400 RPM. Rich Benbrook, one of my mentors and chief pilot at Skylark for many years stated it succinctly: "Make the engine sound the same going down as it did going up". This power setting is held until in the pattern where the power is slowly reduced, the goal being to be at flight idle and 70 mph over the fence. I also never get out of dead-stick glide range of the airport. If you are in a hurry to get down, roll in full back trim and maintain whatever bank angle that gives you around 120 mph. This is a lot of g's to pull all day but it is effective. The engines at Skylark routinely make TBO and they experience no cracked cylinders or other problems. We had a 260 hp Pawnee with CS prop which added the complexity of managing the prop. We slowly reduced pitch while reducing the throttle. CS props are not worth the workload, cost or maintenaance issues, IMO. Many schemes have been tested and ultimately abandoned for this KISS procedure that works. |
#3
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On Sep 17, 5:59 am, Tim Hanke wrote:
We have acquired a 260 hp Pawnee for a towplane and was wondering what others are doing for cool down after the sailplane releases... Thanks, Tim Hanke Adirondack Soaring Group Saratoga Springs, NY I believe the Lycoming guidance is to cool down no faster than 50 degrees a minute (CHT). To accomplish this, after release we continue to fly straight and level for one minute, reducing power to just keep the RPM at or below red line. Then we start a decent at 100-120 mph reducing power gradually until we enter the pattern. This allows us to cool down at about 25 degrees a minute. Works for us. No cracked cylinder heads. Olin Kane Durango Soaring Club Durango, CO |
#4
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On Sep 17, 4:59 am, Tim Hanke wrote:
We have acquired a 260 hp Pawnee for a towplane and was wondering what others are doing for cool down after the sailplane releases...S Thanks, Tim Hanke Adirondack Soaring Group Saratoga Springs, NY Once the glider releases and I'm in my left turn I lower full flaps and reduce power SLOWLY to 2400 RPM and begin to lean. Then during the decesnt hold about 100-110 while making a series of steep S-Turns to keep the rate of decent high at the relatively low airspeed. Also during the decent I reduce power about 100RPM every minute untill reaching 1900-2000 RPM. Things usually work out to 1900 RPM just as I enter the pattern and I can adjust from there. The key to the whole process is Flaps & S-turns = high rate of decent/higher power settings, at a relatively low airspeed. I'm curious what the operators with AgWagons are doing to keep thier Continental's warm as they seem to be not quite as tolerant? Anyone know? |
#6
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Gav:
You can add Super Cubs and AgWagons to that list. 0-540 Lychoming engines are incredibly tough and durable but the one way I have seen cylinders crack is by excessive leaning. |
#7
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On Sep 20, 8:17 am, " wrote:
Gav: You can add Super Cubs and AgWagons to that list. 0-540 Lychoming engines are incredibly tough and durable but the one way I have seen cylinders crack is by excessive leaning. Say it again, bro Grubb, "STAY IN DEAD STICK GLIDING RANGE OF THE AIRPORT!" The engine won't run on air or water. If it quits, or runs rough, don't try to fix it in the air. Pick a landing spot first. That spot will be very nearly 45 degrees down with the prop turning. Most pilots don't know how to land off-field, so they will get up- tight and either land long or short if its not their own airport. I speak from painful experience,,, 3 different "good pilots" put down 3 Pawnees with heavy damage to the aircraft. Two out of gas, one with water in the fuel...didn't check after refueling. One landed on a road, signs tore the wings off. The second one landed on the airport but stalled it high, almost high enough to start a spin. Totaled. The one with water was at 9,000 ft and tried to fix the rough running engine by switching mags and pumping the throttle. It blew up and caught fire. He landed in a field, hit a sprinkler line. A farmer nearby had a fire extinguisher and put out the fire. It was contained in front of the FIREWALL. Everything had to be replaced and a wing major repair. He overshot his landing. In summary, Pilots are taught to pre-flight their planes, but often don't. Most are taught how to talk on the radio, but not taught how to land offf field. Fred |
#8
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![]() "fred" wrote in message ps.com... On Sep 20, 8:17 am, " wrote: Gav: You can add Super Cubs and AgWagons to that list. 0-540 Lychoming engines are incredibly tough and durable but the one way I have seen cylinders crack is by excessive leaning. Say it again, bro Grubb, "STAY IN DEAD STICK GLIDING RANGE OF THE AIRPORT!" The engine won't run on air or water. If it quits, or runs rough, don't try to fix it in the air. Pick a landing spot first. That spot will be very nearly 45 degrees down with the prop turning. Most pilots don't know how to land off-field, so they will get up- tight and either land long or short if its not their own airport. I speak from painful experience,,, 3 different "good pilots" put down 3 Pawnees with heavy damage to the aircraft. Two out of gas, one with water in the fuel...didn't check after refueling. One landed on a road, signs tore the wings off. The second one landed on the airport but stalled it high, almost high enough to start a spin. Totaled. The one with water was at 9,000 ft and tried to fix the rough running engine by switching mags and pumping the throttle. It blew up and caught fire. He landed in a field, hit a sprinkler line. A farmer nearby had a fire extinguisher and put out the fire. It was contained in front of the FIREWALL. Everything had to be replaced and a wing major repair. He overshot his landing. In summary, Pilots are taught to pre-flight their planes, but often don't. Most are taught how to talk on the radio, but not taught how to land offf field. Fred I've heard these stories from all around the country. We probably don't hear about those that make good dead stick landings. One of our local tuggies managed his "Out-of-Gas Adventure" with the local FSDO director in the glider he was towing. It reminds me that no one has crashed a winch. Bill D |
#9
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Bill Daniels wrote:
It reminds me that no one has crashed a winch. Perhaps, but I was recently standing near a winch that nearly did, as a result of inadequate wheel chocks and no tie downs. The winch ended up about 10 feet away from where it started... Marc |
#10
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We have a PA-25-235, Lycoming O-540 with fixed pitch prop. At the last
rebuild we used the STC and pumped it up to 250HP. We tow from apx 3000MSL airport on 110F days with no problems. In the winter (40-50F) we start leaning just above pattern altitude. In the summer.. about 500ft AGL. Technique, When the RPM starts to drop during the climb, lean to get the RPM rise and leave it, your climbing so you will get richer with more altitude, then lean again. Full power climbs. At release, Left turn and nose over to about 80-100, depending on turbulence, and reduce power to maintain 2400rpm, don't touch the mixture. Faster airspeed, no load on the prop, rpms increase, slow reductions in power setting, 2200, 2000, 1800, etc into the traffic pattern, plan the pattern so as to not have to level off and increase power to maintain altitude. I normally enter the downwind at 1000ft and may be down to 500ft when I turn a close in base leg, power back to about 1500 rpm, airspeed slowing (nose attitude change) to 70 and 60 on final. I don't touch the mixture until the next take off, or full power if a go around is needed. Other techniques include rolling to steep bank, and pulling G while maintaining airspeed with nose on the horizon (rudder) control. Can get descent rates of over 2000fpm, it helps coming down from a high tow while maintaining cooling. Others on their warm up flight will determine the mixture position to get max rpm in level flight at normal release altitudes. Using the same leaning technique in the climb, but will reset the mixture to the predetermined position for the descent and using the "staged cooling" process. Again, planning the descent into the traffic pattern to not have to level off on downwind, a continuous descent to earth. BT "Tim Hanke" wrote in message ups.com... We have acquired a 260 hp Pawnee for a towplane and was wondering what others are doing for cool down after the sailplane releases... Thanks, Tim Hanke Adirondack Soaring Group Saratoga Springs, NY |
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