What dtango said in his first post. Throttle back and start your pull-out, and don't touch that blue knob (pitch).
Pulling pitch back won't do anything; the force of airflow is already moving faster than the governor can possibly compensate for. You can't increase pitch because the prop blades are at their mechanical stop and going faster by the second. If your RPM is increasing, you're already in trouble. Leaving it be isn't a good thing either. As engine speed increases, so does friction. In this case, it increases to the point the bearing surface between the crank journals and block bearings heats up the oil. Leave it too long, and your oil takes on the consistency of half-frozen molasses. This bogs down the crank, which is already loaded up with an outrageous amount of torque. So, Mr. Crank meet Mr. Bearing at 3,000+ RPM. Engine barks to a stop, prop slams to a halt, crank gets ruined, crank bearings are gone, and you've got exactly zero oil pressure to control that Ham Standard or Aeroproducts prop! Meaning your "Constant Speed" propeller just became a fixed-pitch prop.
A classic case of back-driving the engine. John Deakin wrote about this many moons ago over on
http://www.avweb.com in a very detailed article. You have to sign up to read it, but it's still there. Hit their Columns section and check the Pelican's Perch archive. Hell, anyone remotely interested in WW2 engines or props needs to sign up and read Deak's articles.
Puck,
US aircraft in WW2 used one of three constant speed prop designs. The Hamilton Standard, which was operated by engine oil pressure. The Aeroproducts, which had it's own oil pump and reservoir. And the Curtiss Electric, using a double planetary gear system coupled to an electric motor that used contact brushes and a slip-ring to get power from the aircraft generator. All three had their pluses, all three had their problems, but WW2 aircraft did have them.
If you want a real eye opener, take a gander at the Fw-190. That little bird used a doohickey called a Kommandogerat (sp?) which controlled prop pitch and mixture as well as throttle. One lever for three functions, in 1941!
-----------------------
Flakbait [Delta6]