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Excellent point Bill,
In my "engine out" the engine did not actually quit (the prop broke),
so increasing the throttle would have resulted in potentially
catastrophic failure of the engine mounts. That was actually a far
greater concern, since losing the engine from the airframe = certain
death. However, I intentionally left the engine running under the old
AF theory that "if it's running, don't stop it - you may need a burst
of thrust just before landing to avoid a powerline or some such."
So, I was speaking to my experience, not a true engine out - my bad for
not thinking it through before writing.
This is a perfect example of why you can never have too much systems
knowledge, and why I like to participate in these forums even if I say
something wrong- because what I learn (or re-learn) may save my life...
Thanks for the pointer, and hope it helps someone!
Cheers,
Bill Reister
Bill wrote:
Hi Bill,
Your recent post about making the
"sacrifice the airplane" decision on the ground was excellent advice.
I've helped repair a gear up Lancair landing and it did very little
damage to the airframe (235).
I've got one little, tiny, minor,
not all that important, good mostly for hangar flying, point to make
though. You said "the glide ratio
is pretty darned good if all the levers are pulled aft". It is, and the
prop in high pitch (pulled aft) makes a substantial difference.
However, once all of the
important stuff has been done and assuming that the engine is
windmilling, you can actually improve the glide ratio a very small
amount by OPENING the throttle. The pistons then aren't pulling against
the low pressure caused by the closed throttle.
Bill Harrelson
N5ZQ 320 1,750 hrs
N6ZQ IV under construction
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