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Jeff,
You can try this for an estimate of TAS: Climb to smooth air, under
AP heading control with altitude hold and constant engine settings
record IAS and GPS GS and device TAS, turn bug 120 Degrees and when
stabilized, record IAS, GS and TAS, again turn bug 120 Degrees and
when stabilized, record IAS, GS and TAS.
Indicated TAS should have been constant.
IAS should have been constant.
Average the 3 GS numbers and that is a good approximation of TAS unless the
air mass movement is weird.
Grayhawk
In a message dated 8/13/2012 8:00:04 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
liegner@ptd.net writes:
Recently, I've been doing (and sharing with you) some engine
setting tests with WOT climbs and LOP cruise settings at different RPM/MAP
settings. This has been partly due to new GAMI injectors, a recent top
end overhaul (400 hours), and renewed curiosity (not the Martian
lander). The experiment is not over yet.
My LIVP has the OAT
installed at the standard location on the pilot side fuselage, near the cabin
door. I have calibrated my Cheltons for the compression effect on the
OAT reading at high/low speeds. But I have seen ice form at indicated
OAT 36*F, and my Malibu friends have shared their POH's "Temperature Rise Due
to Ram Recovery" graph. I shared this with the LML on Aug 9,
2009.
And recently, someone on the LML wondered why he always sees a
headwind on his EFIS. During my weekend flight from Oregon to New Jersey
(duration 8 hours), I expected some decent tail winds based on
forecasts. But my Chelton EFIS often showed a crosswind, sometimes a
headwind, and rarely a very mild tail wind; not what was expected. This
was at FL230 and FL250.
So I was thinking that if my OAT was
reporting an erroneous reading, then the TAS calculation provided would be
wrong. Then the calculation of winds based on Magnetic Heading compared
to Ground Track mixed with the GPS derived ground speed compared with my TAS
would be in error. This makes the OAT a critical value to proper
reporting and judging.
Everything ties back to accurate OAT
reading.
First, what suggestions do you have regarding this OAT
question? Do you have some keen examples showing an OAT error of X
produces a TAS error of a certain magnitude Y?
Then, based on prior
experience (not installer intuition), what have you discovered regarding your
OAT readings and then sensor locations in the LIVP?
Maybe this is
leading me to rewire the OAT, but I'm not wild about the idea of this without
some solid experience by others.
Thanks.
Jeff
L N334P
Footnote: On the ground, the plane's OAT matches the
measured temperature on the cars, the bank and on the
radio.
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