Hi everyone,
While the plane is being built, I've been flying a C-140 to acquire the tailwheel skills I need. But when I need to actually get somewhere today, I also have a Cessna 172RG Cutlass.
Last weekend, I flew up to Grand Marais, MN. Beautiful spot to visit, and a potentially challenging airport on a hilltop with gusty winds at almost 90 degrees to the runway (at least on the days I was there).
Normally I like to fly low, but due to wildfires in both Canada and Minnesota, on the way back I needed to fly high to stay above the smoke and haze. It was a great flying day, very smooth at 8500 feet where I was cruising along at 136 kts true and 165 kts ground speed. But eventually all good things must come to an end, and I had to descend. As I dropped the nose and trimmed for 500 ft/min, I was creeping up to around 140-142 kts. The top of the green arc in this plane is 145 kts, and the air was smooth, so I wasn't too worried, but I like to stay away from the yellow if I can.
Because the Cutlass has a constant speed prop, it's not like the fixed 172 where you can just pull the throttle back to slow down. You pull back too far, and of course you get the "gear is up you dope" honk when the MP goes below 12 inches (knowing that jaredyates has an issue with flying the warning tones ). I'd heard the stories of folks flying behind a CS prop that says at high RPM, props make great brakes. So I spun the prop up to 2700 rpm. It didn't seem to make a difference, or very little that I could tell. My in-flight checklist for descent just says "Power as needed". So I just put the prop back to 2300 rpm where it was before and watched my speed on descent, reducing angle as necessary.
Once I was on the ground, I was thinking about how to deal with descents of this nature, so I thought I'd reach out to you guys. The one thing I didn't do was run the prop in the other direction (<2300 rpm). Would that have helped? I recall reading that the courser the pitch, the less drag it has (like feathering).
Thoughts are welcomed!
Best regards,
Chris
While the plane is being built, I've been flying a C-140 to acquire the tailwheel skills I need. But when I need to actually get somewhere today, I also have a Cessna 172RG Cutlass.
Last weekend, I flew up to Grand Marais, MN. Beautiful spot to visit, and a potentially challenging airport on a hilltop with gusty winds at almost 90 degrees to the runway (at least on the days I was there).
Normally I like to fly low, but due to wildfires in both Canada and Minnesota, on the way back I needed to fly high to stay above the smoke and haze. It was a great flying day, very smooth at 8500 feet where I was cruising along at 136 kts true and 165 kts ground speed. But eventually all good things must come to an end, and I had to descend. As I dropped the nose and trimmed for 500 ft/min, I was creeping up to around 140-142 kts. The top of the green arc in this plane is 145 kts, and the air was smooth, so I wasn't too worried, but I like to stay away from the yellow if I can.
Because the Cutlass has a constant speed prop, it's not like the fixed 172 where you can just pull the throttle back to slow down. You pull back too far, and of course you get the "gear is up you dope" honk when the MP goes below 12 inches (knowing that jaredyates has an issue with flying the warning tones ). I'd heard the stories of folks flying behind a CS prop that says at high RPM, props make great brakes. So I spun the prop up to 2700 rpm. It didn't seem to make a difference, or very little that I could tell. My in-flight checklist for descent just says "Power as needed". So I just put the prop back to 2300 rpm where it was before and watched my speed on descent, reducing angle as necessary.
Once I was on the ground, I was thinking about how to deal with descents of this nature, so I thought I'd reach out to you guys. The one thing I didn't do was run the prop in the other direction (<2300 rpm). Would that have helped? I recall reading that the courser the pitch, the less drag it has (like feathering).
Thoughts are welcomed!
Best regards,
Chris
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