fly4fun Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 I recently purchased a 1967 M20C with a Lycoming 180hp carbureted engine. No one in my area has any Mooney experience so I have no one to ask about handling and flying characteristics. One question I would like an answer for is what manifold pressure and RPM settings do you guys use for climb out and cruise? Normally my flying is done between 3,000 and 6,000 MSL. Quote
Parker_Woodruff Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Wide open throttle and Max RPM for climb. In cruise, only reduce Throttle for turbulence or to stay below any speed limitations on the airspeed indicator. Quote
rob Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Parker's description is exactly how I fly my 1965C. I cruise at WOT and 2500RPM from 4000-9000, and occasionally go to 2600RPM at 10,000 or above. Quote
Oscar Avalle Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 I pull RPM back to 2400, but keep WOT. Quote
JaredDavis Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Look at the link referenced here for a detailed description on "flying by the numbers": http://www.mooneyspace.com/index.cfm?mainaction=posts&forumid=3&threadid=4798#post61711 Quote
gregwatts Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 POH calls for 26 squared during climbout. Quote
Parker_Woodruff Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Quote: gregwatts POH calls for 26 squared during climbout. Quote
Hank Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Quote: fly4fun I recently purchased a 1967 M20C with a Lycoming 180hp carbureted engine. No one in my area has any Mooney experience so I have no one to ask about handling and flying characteristics. One question I would like an answer for is what manifold pressure and RPM settings do you guys use for climb out and cruise? Normally my flying is done between 3,000 and 6,000 MSL. Quote
Hank Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Quote: Parker_Woodruff The 26"/2600 RPM recommendation means you can climb about 3-4 minutes and then can't even make 26" MP at that point. 1) It doesn't hurt the engine to keep the throttlewide open. Cooling is often BETTER while Wide Open 2)No sense in even pulling the throttle back for such a short time. The engine is rated for 180 hp continuously. Might as well use it. 1 Quote
M20E-1964 Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 any automatic enrichment feature on a fuel injected E model? Quote
danb35 Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 No, but still no reason to pull the throttle back. On a normal flight, I'm WOT from the takeoff roll until about 2000' above pattern altitude on my descent. Quote
KSMooniac Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Quote: JimR Negative. Its just on the carb'd models. It is still good technique for those of us with fuel injection to climb at WOT, though, because that is where the induction system is most efficient. Jim Quote
jetdriven Posted July 3, 2012 Report Posted July 3, 2012 Quote: KSMooniac Negative. Its just on the carb'd models. It is still good technique for those of us with fuel injection to climb at WOT, though, because that is where the induction system is most efficient. Jim Quote
DaV8or Posted July 4, 2012 Report Posted July 4, 2012 Quote: jetdriven WOT from takeoff roll until midfield downwind. Quote
jetdriven Posted July 4, 2012 Report Posted July 4, 2012 yeah I should revise that. I can count on one hand on the last year and a half I have done it, but backing off on the throttle can result in some serious savings if just out looking at horse property. At 15", 2200 RPM, and peak EGT, I can get 4.6 GPH. Quote
danb35 Posted July 4, 2012 Report Posted July 4, 2012 Quote: DaV8or but there is nothing wrong, or damaging by using the throttle for slower speeds, Quote
201er Posted July 4, 2012 Report Posted July 4, 2012 Quote: jetdriven WOT from takeoff roll until midfield downwind. 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.