Series 20 Lear Power Management Question
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Series 20 Lear Power Management Question
Hi Dear Guys,
Never flownan aircraft with those historical “pure” jet engines. After an interestingdebate with a friend and becoming curious: how was the power management ofthose famous GE Cj610 engines?
Did you use EPR tables for takeoff powersetting? How did you set climb power?
How did the parameters change during climb(EGT/EPR/RPM/Throttle setting)?
Rules of thumbs,ever day practices?
Lookingforward to your reply,
cheers,
Tamas
Never flownan aircraft with those historical “pure” jet engines. After an interestingdebate with a friend and becoming curious: how was the power management ofthose famous GE Cj610 engines?
Did you use EPR tables for takeoff powersetting? How did you set climb power?
How did the parameters change during climb(EGT/EPR/RPM/Throttle setting)?
Rules of thumbs,ever day practices?
Lookingforward to your reply,
cheers,
Tamas
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Yep, what Bus Junkie said, and taxi on one engine until you absolutely have to start the second engine. Delay your descent until the last possible minute.
My best rate of climb in a 24E was 12,000 fpm out of SFO. Good times.
My best rate of climb in a 24E was 12,000 fpm out of SFO. Good times.
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Many thanks guys. In the meantime I went through some videos and saw that for T/O the power was referenced to EPR (T/O EPR was preset by an "index pointer"). During climb, power was set most probably using EGT.
Thank you CL300 for the link!!!
If possible keep those retro stories coming...
Cheers,
tamas
Thank you CL300 for the link!!!
If possible keep those retro stories coming...
Cheers,
tamas
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During my initial type rating training at FlightSafety Tucson, Arizona, I rented a Lear 24B for the flight training portion. We were doing touch and goes on Tucson's long runway (11L).
On the second takeoff just after V1, the right engine rolled back to idle (fuel control failure). We took off on the left engine and climbed out at 1,500 fpm and returned for landing. The tower noticed that our climb was not as robust as usual and asked if everything was ok. This was in July when the temps there are in the high 90s.
On the second takeoff just after V1, the right engine rolled back to idle (fuel control failure). We took off on the left engine and climbed out at 1,500 fpm and returned for landing. The tower noticed that our climb was not as robust as usual and asked if everything was ok. This was in July when the temps there are in the high 90s.