Last Friday I needed to fly up to a little airport at Lincoln, Calif, about 130 miles north from here. Was time to get the T's rear struts tested.
Sometimes we can get a lot of wind in the summertime here, but I, just by luck, got a REALLY quiet day.
Found out what my 12D-85 actually cruises at--at least for one power setting.
It apparently was dead calm all the way up and back as I got the same numbers both ways. I was trying to run about 2150 RPM, as my experience is that higher cruise than that just burns extra gas without adding proportionate speed. Generally my philosophy is to use the extra HP for T/O and climb.
At 2150 and 3,500 feet I was showing 85 MPH GPS most of the time. The time vs distance in both directions gave the same number.
Had to back down on the power to a pointer width over 2100 several times as it was doing an altitude creep up at 2150 and I was having trouble getting a precise trim with the tab, so I know it is a good solid number.
The fuel consumption worked out to 4.47 gal. per hour, which agrees with the factory charts. If my calculations are correct that is just short of 18 miles per gallon. That is without any mixture adjustment.
I flew almost the entire way up and back using just my feet and the throttle. It was pretty funny that I found the few times I got a slight descent that I could get a noticeable trim up by putting my right arm up across the seat back.
The rear struts both tested good and it was an enjoyable and informative flight.
This week the town (Lincoln) darn near blew up when a bunch of railroad tank cars caught fire. I missed the action by a few days.
Darryl
P.S. I cannot imagine flying her for 4 hours straight as I did when I brought it home from the desert in Souther Cal. Someone would have to pry me out with a crowbar. Chuckle.
Sometimes we can get a lot of wind in the summertime here, but I, just by luck, got a REALLY quiet day.
Found out what my 12D-85 actually cruises at--at least for one power setting.
It apparently was dead calm all the way up and back as I got the same numbers both ways. I was trying to run about 2150 RPM, as my experience is that higher cruise than that just burns extra gas without adding proportionate speed. Generally my philosophy is to use the extra HP for T/O and climb.
At 2150 and 3,500 feet I was showing 85 MPH GPS most of the time. The time vs distance in both directions gave the same number.
Had to back down on the power to a pointer width over 2100 several times as it was doing an altitude creep up at 2150 and I was having trouble getting a precise trim with the tab, so I know it is a good solid number.
The fuel consumption worked out to 4.47 gal. per hour, which agrees with the factory charts. If my calculations are correct that is just short of 18 miles per gallon. That is without any mixture adjustment.
I flew almost the entire way up and back using just my feet and the throttle. It was pretty funny that I found the few times I got a slight descent that I could get a noticeable trim up by putting my right arm up across the seat back.
The rear struts both tested good and it was an enjoyable and informative flight.
This week the town (Lincoln) darn near blew up when a bunch of railroad tank cars caught fire. I missed the action by a few days.
Darryl
P.S. I cannot imagine flying her for 4 hours straight as I did when I brought it home from the desert in Souther Cal. Someone would have to pry me out with a crowbar. Chuckle.
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