
Originally Posted by
Dev One
it's a long time ago now (1950's) but my fathers Proctor, during run up he would set the throttle to full, with the Prop set to coarse, watch the Boost gauge, then push the prop lever to Fine watch the RPM go from about 1700 at coarse to 2400 at fine. If one then closed the throttle the RPM would decrease to idle ( noise with it) . In flight running flat out level flight 2400 RPM indicated, Boost - 1/2 psi, about 160/170 mph, if one pulled the prop lever fully back to coarse the RPM would drop back to about 1700 (too low for continuous running as oil pressure insufficient for bearings & possibly prop angle change) noise would drop, but airspeed & rpm should increase until a balance of HP, & drag in theory should equalise. My FS9 Proctor uses a Gypsy Major & fixed pitch set of sounds made by I cant remember, but set up as a Constant speed prop, & to me that sounds authentic, although missing two cylinders, my Q6 uses the Microsoft D H Comet sound file, but there seem to be no prop levers but the ones in my model do work & the throttle & prop levers affecting sound each in their own operating range. I believe a Variable pitch prop should be similar. In your aircraft is it a VP or a CS prop, early VP props only had coarse or fine settings, no in between I think, or one had to constantly fiddle until one stabilized.
Keith
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