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Scott:
If you think the errors I note which creep into the manifold pressure
gage are bad, be aware that the standard run of Cessna/Beech/Piper
tachometers are notoriously bad, frequently being off 100 RPM or more. I
once knew how to check the gyro using the hour meter based on an article I
read. The hour meter reads accurately (actual clock time) at a given RPM,
and it is a weird intermediate value like 2357 RPM or some such. If one
starts a stopwatch when the hourmeter on the tach turns over to a new digit,
and you track it for a half hour or so, one can measure and correct the
error. When my TR-182 was nearly new, I did such a check and found the tach
reading 83 RPM low, and I placarded it as such. I no nonger complained when
it appeared to be turning about 100 RPM low on takeoff. It was an
instrumentation error.
So, in answer to your question: how do we set POWER if the manifold pressure
and tachometer instruments are so much in error? The answer is: VERY
APPROXIMATELY.
Sorry, but it's true.
Fred
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LML homepage: http://www.olsusa.com/Users/Mkaye/maillist.html
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