TTaylor Posted January 23, 2019 Report Posted January 23, 2019 On 1/19/2019 at 5:06 AM, Shadrach said: Why are you closing cowl flaps during GUMPS or prior to landing? Does your POH say to do that? Cowl flaps should be open at all time during ground ops. There is no utility in closing them in the pattern only to open them again after touchdown. Expand About five months of the year my cowl flaps stay closed, but this is the land of ice and snow . Quote
Shadrach Posted January 23, 2019 Report Posted January 23, 2019 On 1/23/2019 at 10:07 PM, TTaylor said: About five months of the year my cowl flaps stay closed, but this is the land of ice and snow . Expand Tell me about it. It was a balmy 9° here on Monday morning with winds 22G31. It was 7° yesterday but at least the wind had calmed. Today it hit 43° which almost softened the ice crust in my yard enough to make snow angles. I open my CF a bit no matter how cold the OAT. I believe the boys at APS when it comes to data and several of them have suggested that warming the engine with them closed is sub optimal. YMMV. Quote
bill98 Posted January 24, 2019 Report Posted January 24, 2019 On 1/23/2019 at 3:23 PM, gsxrpilot said: You can certainly simplify your life by getting rid of that 25 square nonsense. Expand Or the use of flaps thus reducing the trim situation Quote
Bryan Posted January 24, 2019 Report Posted January 24, 2019 On 1/23/2019 at 10:07 PM, TTaylor said: About five months of the year my cowl flaps stay closed, but this is the land of ice and snow . Expand Even in the summertime, I close my cowl flaps on decent. I keep them closed until I am under control after flap retraction during a normal landing. During a go-around, they are on my list to open but I make sure I am positive rate climbing (and indicating) after I retract the gear before I worry about the cowl flaps. 2 Quote
johncuyle Posted January 25, 2019 Report Posted January 25, 2019 On 1/24/2019 at 4:09 AM, Bryan said: Even in the summertime, I close my cowl flaps on decent. I keep them closed until I am under control after flap retraction during a normal landing. During a go-around, they are on my list to open but I make sure I am positive rate climbing (and indicating) after I retract the gear before I worry about the cowl flaps. Expand I usually open my cowl flaps shortly before short final, on my last GUMPS flowcheck. They generate some extra drag, which is nice, and in the event of a go around they'll be open already but won't have been open long enough for the engine to have cooled off. Go arounds are higher workload in a 231 than other Mooneys. Quote
Bob - S50 Posted January 25, 2019 Report Posted January 25, 2019 Man this has turned from buying Mooney to when to use cowl flaps. Here's mine: Wide open for takeoff. At 100 KIAS, close to the trailing position. At level off, throttle, RPM, mixture set then close the cowl flaps and they stay that way. If I have to go around it's cowl flaps open, mixture rich, prop full forward, throttle forward. Then it's back to just like a normal takeoff. Leave them closed until I've landed. During the rollout flaps up and cowl flaps open. Quote
steingar Posted January 25, 2019 Report Posted January 25, 2019 On 1/25/2019 at 6:18 PM, johncuyle said: Go arounds are higher workload in a 231 than other Mooneys. Expand Worse than the J-bar? Quote
johncuyle Posted January 26, 2019 Report Posted January 26, 2019 (edited) On 1/25/2019 at 8:02 PM, steingar said: Worse than the J-bar? Expand Probably. The J-Bar you raise the gear and then it's raised. None of the Lycoming fours have the delightful combination of full up trim on final, the obnoxiously designed electric flaps, and an engine that requires multiple adjustments to make full power that the 231 has. Edited January 26, 2019 by johncuyle Quote
Hank Posted January 26, 2019 Report Posted January 26, 2019 My cowl flap procedure is even simpler than the gear. Gear: down at FAF or when glideslope is dot-and-a-half high; or VFR, on downwind, gear down abeam my intended point of landing. Grab the white knob, pull out gently, flip to Down position and check green light, then recheck floor indicator on short final. Cowl flaps: never touch 'em, they were fixed at the factory Trim is manual wheel below the seat. Flaps is an electric push-and-hold while they move, which I can reach with a finger whike holding the throttle to Idle. Simple! So are my hot starts . . . . Quote
LGL Posted January 27, 2019 Report Posted January 27, 2019 Dave. Email me at lgl@nepps.net. I went from a 182t to an ovation in 2017. I’ll give you my 2 bits Quote
Bob_Belville Posted January 27, 2019 Report Posted January 27, 2019 On 1/27/2019 at 1:42 AM, LGL said: Dave. Email me at lgl@nepps.net. I went from a 182t to an ovation in 2017. I’ll give you my 2 bits Expand Aw, RACACH, share your experience and wisdom with all of us! That's what we do here. 1 Quote
Releew Posted January 28, 2019 Report Posted January 28, 2019 You should not hesitate to make the transition to a Mooney. Personally I, as well as several others consider this aircraft to be one of the safest around. Based on the wing design you must respect the numbers in the POH. My belief is, if you can fly an airplane at controlled airspeeds the Mooney will land just like your land that 182. Obviously there is much more to manage in the Mooney and you need to learn to stay ahead of the aircraft but that comes with training and time in type. I have heard so many people speak about the Mooney as a Hard to Fly airplane...that's nonsense. As I suggest in the past, find an instructor that has a minimal of 100 hours in the Mooney. Use them to get past the insurance company then find a seasoned Mooney pilot that will fly with you as often as possible. There are several bits of information you can learn from a mentor with a lot of Mooney time! Good Luck and Welcome. You will find this site to be very helpful as there is a wealth of information on it by folks who are very fond of this aircraft!! Rick 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.