MichaelFarley56 wrote:Just out of curiosity, what rpm do you see at full throttle in level flight? What climb rate are you seeing and at what airspeed?
Before I installed the turbo on my engine, I had a P-Tip 54 X 44 and would normally see 3150 rpm on climb out around 90 mph, and a full throttle maximum rpm of 3450-3500.
Sorry, I do KTS and not MPH, so you'll have to convert...
And I've never seen numbers like those with my AeroVee. Sensenich prop, 2950-3000 on initial climb out. In cold weather, 700 fpm. In warm weather at full gross, 200 fpm. 3250 max level flight, but that burns close to 7 gph. Normal cruise is 95 kts, 2,950 rpm at 4.5 gph. 100 kts will put me just over 3100 rpm and about 5 gph. To get 900+ miles to OSH from BOSton is about 10 hours for me, and I average very close to 4.5 gph all the way. 300 mile legs with at least a 45 minute reserve.
My best climb outs over the hill and trees at one end of my runway are at 55-60 kts. Yup, 55 kts. That's still more than 20 kts above my indicated stall speed. If I don't have obstacles to contend with then 65 kts. Once I've got some altitude, climbs are generally at 70 kts.
But things to remember about fixed pitch props (analogy given to me by Sensenich engineer): they are like gears on a bicycle. If you want to go up a steep hill you shift into low gear so your pedals are turning faster. That's a climb prop. If you want to cruise on level terrain you shift into a higher gear with your pedals turning slower. That's a cruise prop. If you get great climb performance, then by definition you will lose cruise performance. If you have great cruise performance then your climb rate will suffer. So if you have a good cruise prop, then your RPMs and FPM on climb out will be lower. There's no free lunch. There's middle ground, but then you might not be happy with either.
Oh, and on the ground I've never seen much over 3,000 rpm static. Certainly nothing even remotely like 3200+. If you see 3400 static on an AeroVee, I'd say your prop is too finely pitched. You might climb, but you're not going to cruise (bicycle analogy).
I'd love to try a Prince prop someday. It would be fun to check the numbers using the same engine.