Scott – reallllly interesting. Does
that explain why, on a smooth flying day, my airspeed roves up and down as much
as 5 knots?
Matt
From: Lancair Mailing
List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf
Of Sky2high@aol.com
Sent: Monday, September 11, 2006
12:38 AM
To: Lancair Mailing List
Subject: [LML] Do the Dew Point
affect the "Do" point - Like "Do" it go slower? Faster?
OK performance fans - recently I became
interested in aircraft/engine performance related to air density. Most
specifically, related to the dew point. I was lucky enough to find an
instrument (about $80) that displays the air temperature, %humidity and
dew point temperature. The dew point is important to understand the air
density difference from the ISA standard predicted only by air
temperature at some altitude.
I will be constructing a spreadsheet to
calculate air density and plot this against performance. I was inspired
this last summer because, after my prop was resealed, I thought the prop shop
had dulled the leading edge thus causing slow cruise speeds recorded on a
series of muggy days. Of course, the first slightly cooler day with
seemingly drier air returned the performance numbers to their prior levels.
I don't have much data yet, but I must
relate an interesting experience as I flew home from Redmond. I was at 9500 MSL (10300 d
alt), 10C near KAIA (western Nebraska, ground
about 4000 MSL), flying in smooth air over a broken layer about 2000 feet
below me. I was doing 166 KIAS (192 KTAS) and decided to add dew point
data. Using my new instrument and sticking it in the vent air outlet, I
first checked that the temperature matched the outside at 10C. Then, I
got a reading of 48% humidity and a dew point (dp) at 0C.
After taking that reading it got more
interesting as the cloud layer became quite scattered and the autopilot
called for a trim adjustment. Duly made, I noticed that the airspeed
moved up to 168 KIAS (195 KTAS) -so I took another reading: 6% hum and
-25C dp. Hmmmmm, only a few minutes had passed.
Some minutes later, scattered layer now
gone, I was at 167 KIAS (193 KTAS) with 18% hum and a -11C dp. Verrrrrry
interrrrrrresting. The air mass composition, with respect to moisture,
had changed quite a bit in just tens of miles. So had the speed.
Note that the outside air temperature remained at 10C throughout.
I can hardly wait to do more testing on
hot and muggy days, if any are still around this year.
I have got to get better flight recording
instrumentation. I hope that the Garmin 430 WAAS upgrade, with 5 readings
per second, will report ground speeds in feet per minute instead of the sloppy
Knots (Yep, switched to Km, it has twice the accuracy). That is
assuming that ground speed is meaningful when the air mass changes. Too
bad I don't have those numbers for this stretch of flight.
Scott
Krueger AKA Grayhawk
Lancair N92EX IO320 SB 89/96
Aurora, IL
(KARR)
A man has got to know his limitations.