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#151
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On Aug 13, 1:53*pm, Clark wrote:
More_Flaps wrote in news:4d4ae514-7bec-4914-9810- : On Aug 12, 12:20*pm, Clark wrote: wrote in news:a3ecf52c-af97-49f0-9c5f-f1b315695566@ 26g2000hsk.googlegroups.com: On Aug 11, 8:23*am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:1e21c1be-8850-4f80- 91d4 - : On Aug 11, 8:48*am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:7de3c2a7-0640-4079- ba38 - : On Aug 11, 6:30*am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:0344026b-cf53- 4b1 8- 92dd - : On Aug 9, 3:47*pm, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:4638dcb3- 05ba- 4e4 4- 97f1 - : On Aug 9, 9:51*am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:ae58b49a- 6d9c- 4b5 1- 957a - : On Aug 9, 12:06*am, Clark wrote: I've pointed out that carb ice is one of the least like ly causes an d I've explaied why that is by noting the temperature and expecte d throttl e setting. I have never said that carb ice is impossible. Maybe th e g uy idl ed for a loooong time and failed to check carb heat on run - up . Mayb e h e fail ed to verify max rpm on the run-up and/or take-off roll.. I t i s possibl e that he had carb ice but at 92 degrees and less than 50% humidi ty and *a hot engine it is just not a likely cause. I notice you did not answer my altitude question. I'm honor ed tha t y ou agree that carb ice cannot be ruled out simply by high ambient _ground_ temperature. Now what else might be an explanation fo r powe r steadily dropping? Cheers. Bull**** on not answering the altitude question. Read the NTS B repo rt (th at you snipped) for yourself. The altitude is quite clear for anyon e w ho can comprehend what they read. I see no statement of altitude. Are you on drugs? Cheers What part of departure do you not understand? Maybe you shoul d g et an adu lt to read the NTSB report to you and explain the meaning of eac h sentenc e. No, cancel that. Not maybe, make it for-sure that you get hel p with understanding the report. Do you know the altitude? It's not contained in the word departur e i s it? Cheers Look up the airport elevation yerself. Departure would be climbi ng out in other words within a thousand feet or so of the airport since yo u don' t seem to understand the term. Nope. Departure is the phase before enroute. It is NOT within 1000' of the airport. How about you take some classes? Now to really destroy your altitude question. Do you really expect car b icing to suddenly develop at high altitude while on departure at fu ll throttle or even cruise power??? Prior to this exchange of posts I wou ld have assumed that you do understand that very low manifold pressure is required for there to be any chance of carb ice in Texas in the summer at Skyhawk attainable altitudes. Obviously my assumption was incorrect an d clearly you have no grasp the causes of carb icing. Nope I would not, as trained pilot, rule it out without testing for it. Jumping to conclusions without facts can get you killed. You wil l note that my original observation was a paranthetic question, which you dismissed because it couldn't possibly happen? How do _you_ know that ice build up had not started -was manifold pressure available t o the pilot and did he look at it? Get real dufuss. I noted that carb icing isn't the most likely cause. Do try to keep up now. -- --- there should be a "sig" here It's been a long long time since I flew a normally carberated airplane, but just had this thought. What would have been the results if in 90 degree temps someone did try to take off with the carb heat full on? Would the loss of power be significant? I'm thinking it's one thing to check for carb ice and carb heat function during run up, but the amount of heat available during full throttle takeoff could be something very different. I know it may have nothing to do with this case, but hope someone can provide an insightful answer anyhow. A couple of examples: Typical rpm drop for carb heat check is about 100 down from 1700 on the Skyhawks I trained in. Call it about a 5% power los s. In slow flight with full (40deg) flaps, I typically could not hold altitu de at full throttle with carb heat on. I suspect departure with carb heat on and a density altitude of 3500 feet would be alot like taking off at about 6,000 feet. I'm assuming a 2% performance loss for every 1,000 feet. It's should be within the capabilities of the Skyhawk but it'll take just a bit more runway and climbout will be slow, really slow if near max gross. But 40 flaps is not a take off config. Why don't you just respond with something along the lines of "nothing useful to contribute but ego drives a response" Wait, that's 'zactly what you did... Give up doofus, you don't have a chance of salvaging even a little bit of respect. Why do you remind me of a trumpeting pachyderm? LOL Cheers |
#152
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On Aug 13, 7:43 am, More_Flaps wrote:
On Aug 13, 1:53 pm, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:4d4ae514-7bec-4914-9810- : On Aug 12, 12:20 pm, Clark wrote: wrote in news:a3ecf52c-af97-49f0-9c5f-f1b315695566@ 26g2000hsk.googlegroups.com: On Aug 11, 8:23 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:1e21c1be-8850-4f80- 91d4 - : On Aug 11, 8:48 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:7de3c2a7-0640-4079- ba38 - : On Aug 11, 6:30 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:0344026b-cf53- 4b1 8- 92dd - : On Aug 9, 3:47 pm, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:4638dcb3- 05ba- 4e4 4- 97f1 - : On Aug 9, 9:51 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:ae58b49a- 6d9c- 4b5 1- 957a - : On Aug 9, 12:06 am, Clark wrote: I've pointed out that carb ice is one of the least like ly causes an d I've explaied why that is by noting the temperature and expecte d throttl e setting. I have never said that carb ice is impossible. Maybe th e g uy idl ed for a loooong time and failed to check carb heat on run - up . Mayb e h e fail ed to verify max rpm on the run-up and/or take-off roll. I t i s possibl e that he had carb ice but at 92 degrees and less than 50% humidi ty and a hot engine it is just not a likely cause. I notice you did not answer my altitude question. I'm honor ed tha t y ou agree that carb ice cannot be ruled out simply by high ambient _ground_ temperature. Now what else might be an explanation fo r powe r steadily dropping? Cheers. Bull**** on not answering the altitude question. Read the NTS B repo rt (th at you snipped) for yourself. The altitude is quite clear for anyon e w ho can comprehend what they read. I see no statement of altitude. Are you on drugs? Cheers What part of departure do you not understand? Maybe you shoul d g et an adu lt to read the NTSB report to you and explain the meaning of eac h sentenc e. No, cancel that. Not maybe, make it for-sure that you get hel p with understanding the report. Do you know the altitude? It's not contained in the word departur e i s it? Cheers Look up the airport elevation yerself. Departure would be climbi ng out in other words within a thousand feet or so of the airport since yo u don' t seem to understand the term. Nope. Departure is the phase before enroute. It is NOT within 1000' of the airport. How about you take some classes? Now to really destroy your altitude question. Do you really expect car b icing to suddenly develop at high altitude while on departure at fu ll throttle or even cruise power??? Prior to this exchange of posts I wou ld have assumed that you do understand that very low manifold pressure is required for there to be any chance of carb ice in Texas in the summer at Skyhawk attainable altitudes. Obviously my assumption was incorrect an d clearly you have no grasp the causes of carb icing. Nope I would not, as trained pilot, rule it out without testing for it. Jumping to conclusions without facts can get you killed. You wil l note that my original observation was a paranthetic question, which you dismissed because it couldn't possibly happen? How do _you_ know that ice build up had not started -was manifold pressure available t o the pilot and did he look at it? Get real dufuss. I noted that carb icing isn't the most likely cause. Do try to keep up now. -- --- there should be a "sig" here It's been a long long time since I flew a normally carberated airplane, but just had this thought. What would have been the results if in 90 degree temps someone did try to take off with the carb heat full on? Would the loss of power be significant? I'm thinking it's one thing to check for carb ice and carb heat function during run up, but the amount of heat available during full throttle takeoff could be something very different. I know it may have nothing to do with this case, but hope someone can provide an insightful answer anyhow. A couple of examples: Typical rpm drop for carb heat check is about 100 down from 1700 on the Skyhawks I trained in. Call it about a 5% power los s. In slow flight with full (40deg) flaps, I typically could not hold altitu de at full throttle with carb heat on. I suspect departure with carb heat on and a density altitude of 3500 feet would be alot like taking off at about 6,000 feet. I'm assuming a 2% performance loss for every 1,000 feet. It's should be within the capabilities of the Skyhawk but it'll take just a bit more runway and climbout will be slow, really slow if near max gross. But 40 flaps is not a take off config. Why don't you just respond with something along the lines of "nothing useful to contribute but ego drives a response" Wait, that's 'zactly what you did... Give up doofus, you don't have a chance of salvaging even a little bit of respect. Why do you remind me of a trumpeting pachyderm? LOL Cheers Wise and powerful with a good memory? |
#153
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On Aug 11, 6:20 pm, Clark wrote:
A couple of examples: Typical rpm drop for carb heat check is about 100 down from 1700 on the Skyhawks I trained in. Call it about a 5% power loss. Here's a sentence from the original post: "The plane was a '59 145hp 172. DA would have been around 3,500. You can draw your own conclusions." A 1959 172 has a Continental O-300 of 145 hp. The Continental has a couple of huge differences from the Lycoming O-320 -powered 172s you fly. First, the carb on the Continental is mounted on a carb "spider" intake manifold fitting mounted below the crankcase. The Lycoming's carb is mounted right on the bottom of the crankcase's oil sump, with the intake manifold cast right into the sump. The Lycoming's carb is warmed by the heat of the oil. When the engine is "cold," even the first startup of a warm day, carb ice is sometimes noted if the temp and dewpoint are close enough. Once the oil is hot carb ice is much less likely, and so Lycoming's carb heat muff is nothing more than an open-sided box measuring about three inches by four, mounted on the backside of the #1 exhaust riser. It doesn't provide much heat at all, because it doesn't need to. The Continental's carb gets no heat from the crankcase. The spider isolates it and the only heat it might get is what cooling air coming around the case might carry to it, which is about the same as a Lyc's carb might get in addition to the oil heating. So Continental engines have a full shroud around one of the mufflers to provide intake air that is heated far hotter than Lyc's tiny box does, and if carb heat is applied we'll get a really serious RPM drop, and often roughness with it since the mixture gets so rich. 200 RPM or more isn't uncommon, and we had a 180 (Continental O-470) that had so much carb heat that we couldn't use it all on final on warm days unless we leaned the engine or the engine would threaten to quit. A carb heat valve that isn't closing all the way can cost some power, and it sure isn't impossible to have a misrigged control or a cable sheath that has slipped. Continentals will ice up much more easily than Lycomings when in operation and the engine is warmed up. The OP, in pointing out that it was such an old 172, triggered that thought right away. Students who learn in Lyc-powered airplanes and then go buy an old Continental- powered ship will often get caught by carb icing, especially if they haven't been thoroughly educated on the risk factors of carb ice and been checked out in that airplane on days when ice is almost certain. In slow flight with full (40deg) flaps, I typically could not hold altitude at full throttle with carb heat on. That's normal but that's a lot of flap. I suspect departure with carb heat on and a density altitude of 3500 feet would be alot like taking off at about 6,000 feet. I'm assuming a 2% performance loss for every 1,000 feet. It's should be within the capabilities of the Skyhawk but it'll take just a bit more runway and climbout will be slow, really slow if near max gross. An old Continental with carb heat on would experience a DA of more like 10,000 feet. The air is too hot. It would also present the risk of detonation at full throttle. Dan |
#154
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On Aug 14, 4:16*am, wrote:
On Aug 13, 7:43 am, More_Flaps wrote: On Aug 13, 1:53 pm, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:4d4ae514-7bec-4914-9810- : On Aug 12, 12:20 pm, Clark wrote: wrote in news:a3ecf52c-af97-49f0-9c5f-f1b315695566@ 26g2000hsk.googlegroups.com: On Aug 11, 8:23 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:1e21c1be-8850-4f80- 91d4 - : On Aug 11, 8:48 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:7de3c2a7-0640-4079- ba38 - : On Aug 11, 6:30 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:0344026b-cf53- 4b1 8- 92dd - : On Aug 9, 3:47 pm, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:4638dcb3- 05ba- 4e4 4- 97f1 - : On Aug 9, 9:51 am, Clark wrote: More_Flaps wrote in news:ae58b49a- 6d9c- 4b5 1- 957a - : On Aug 9, 12:06 am, Clark wrote: I've pointed out that carb ice is one of the least like ly causes an d I've explaied why that is by noting the temperature and expecte d throttl e setting. I have never said that carb ice is impossible. Maybe th e g uy idl ed for a loooong time and failed to check carb heat on run - up . Mayb e h e fail ed to verify max rpm on the run-up and/or take-off roll. I t i s possibl e that he had carb ice but at 92 degrees and less than 50% humidi ty and *a hot engine it is just not a likely cause. I notice you did not answer my altitude question. I'm honor ed tha t y ou agree that carb ice cannot be ruled out simply by high ambient _ground_ temperature. Now what else might be an explanation fo r powe r steadily dropping? Cheers. Bull**** on not answering the altitude question. Read the NTS B repo rt (th at you snipped) for yourself. The altitude is quite clear for anyon e w ho can comprehend what they read. I see no statement of altitude. Are you on drugs? Cheers What part of departure do you not understand? Maybe you shoul d g et an adu lt to read the NTSB report to you and explain the meaning of eac h sentenc e. No, cancel that. Not maybe, make it for-sure that you get hel p with understanding the report. Do you know the altitude? It's not contained in the word departur e i s it? Cheers Look up the airport elevation yerself. Departure would be climbi ng out in other words within a thousand feet or so of the airport since yo u don' t seem to understand the term. Nope. Departure is the phase before enroute. It is NOT within 1000' of the airport. How about you take some classes? Now to really destroy your altitude question. Do you really expect car b icing to suddenly develop at high altitude while on departure at fu ll throttle or even cruise power??? Prior to this exchange of posts I wou ld have assumed that you do understand that very low manifold pressure is required for there to be any chance of carb ice in Texas in the summer at Skyhawk attainable altitudes. Obviously my assumption was incorrect an d clearly you have no grasp the causes of carb icing. Nope I would not, as trained pilot, rule it out without testing for it. Jumping to conclusions without facts can get you killed. You wil l note that my original observation was a paranthetic question, which you dismissed because it couldn't possibly happen? How do _you_ know that ice build up had not started -was manifold pressure available t o the pilot and did he look at it? Get real dufuss. I noted that carb icing isn't the most likely cause. Do try to keep up now. -- --- there should be a "sig" here It's been a long long time since I flew a normally carberated airplane, but just had this thought. What would have been the results if in 90 degree temps someone did try to take off with the carb heat full on? Would the loss of power be significant? I'm thinking it's one thing to check for carb ice and carb heat function during run up, but the amount of heat available during full throttle takeoff could be something very different. I know it may have nothing to do with this case, but hope someone can provide an insightful answer anyhow. A couple of examples: Typical rpm drop for carb heat check is about 100 down from 1700 on the Skyhawks I trained in. Call it about a 5% power los s. In slow flight with full (40deg) flaps, I typically could not hold altitu de at full throttle with carb heat on. I suspect departure with carb heat on and a density altitude of 3500 feet would be alot like taking off at about 6,000 feet. I'm assuming a 2% performance loss for every 1,000 feet. It's should be within the capabilities of the Skyhawk but it'll take just a bit more runway and climbout will be slow, really slow if near max gross. But 40 flaps is not a take off config. Why don't you just respond with something along the lines of "nothing useful to contribute but ego drives a response" Wait, that's 'zactly what you did... Give up doofus, you don't have a chance of salvaging even a little bit of respect. Why do you remind me of a trumpeting pachyderm? LOL Cheers Wise and powerful with a good memory? LOL. Excitable, heavy and noisy?. Cheers |
#155
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