by GraemeSmith » Mon Aug 09, 2021 4:41 am
I once did some testing of "air starting" a Continental while over a deserted airport on a dead quiet day. With the plane in level slow flight (flaps up) I pulled the mixture to stop the engine. Put the mixture back where it was and dived aggressively to spin the prop and restart the engine. Starting at 12,000ft DA It only used 500ft of dive to restart. But the lower I got (using a safety floor of 3,000ft) the more altitude was needed to restart the engine. In the end it was taking 1,500ft to get a start.
I don't think this was cooling but possibly the increasing air pressure as the plane got lower. As the air got thicker lower down, the jugs were taking more effort to turn them over as they were filled with a harder to compress "thicker" mixture. Well that was my thinking / reasoning. But that was a Marvel-Schebler carb. And I'm not sure our smaller Prince or Sensenich diameter props would have the grunt at lower RPM to get an air start. Which is not what you were asking anyway!
So to Mike Farley's:
"would immediately pull the mixture to idle cutoff, hit the starter button and push the mixture back in as the engine spins. I bet it will restart right away. That way the engine doesn't flood."
I'm pretty sure this is good advice. I sort backed into this solution once when I was too rich pulling a loop and the engine riched more on the pull and stopped. Realizing what had probably happened I still had the energy to bunt the plane level and as I hit the starter I was pulling the mixture out to lean the carb and as the engine caught - pushed the mixture in again to keep it running.
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So add the two together. I suspect that the restart spot for the carb will vary with the Density Altitude the plane is flying at - but whether it makes an appreciable difference that one could calibrate - not sure. Perhaps the action of just steadily pushing the mixture in as you crank would find the correct spot at some point.
Graeme JW Smith