Originally posted by Downtown:
1. Does increasing or decreasing the RPM of the aircraft engine change the RPM of a constant speed propellor?
2. Does varying the cutting angle of a propellor blade change the RPM of a propellor.
3. Did aircraft have the ability to A. Change the RPM of the Propellor, and B. Change the cutting angle of the propellor.
4. Is it possible to set you engine throttle to its highest setting, and change the cutting angle of a popeller?
Here is the way I understand it.
The engine may be connected directly or via a gearbox to the propellor. This means that the engine and the propellor may or may not rotate at the same speed.
But...At any rate, their speed difference is relative and constant. It all boils down to this. An increase in engine RPM will cause a corresponding increase in propellor RPM and vice versa. There is no shifting of gears, while in flight, of engine to propellor speed ratios.
You can change propellor thrust in two ways.
- Make a change in the speed of rotation
- Make a change in propellor pitch
These are two functions and controls that happen independently.
The pilot has two methods of control.
- Throttle control --> engine Hp output
- Speed control --> the RPM setpoint of the speed governor
The term "constant speed" is a little misleading. This is because a plane with a constant speed propellor system can also change engine RPM.
The idea is so that you can design and use an engine that is most efficient at a certain RPM and couple it to a propellor that is most efficient at a certain RPM.
The speed control system uses an RPM governor. This is the speed control. The RPM or speed governor actually controls propellor pitch, not engine speed.Normally, this is how it works. Say that that you increase the throttle. This would make the engine want to turn faster. The speed control system senses this increase in RPM, and compensates by increasing the propellor pitch. Increased propellor pitch raises the Hp requirements of the engine and the engine slows down. This works the same in reverse for decreasing throttle.
Any attempt to change the engine RPM is compensated by a corresponding change in propellor pitch. The net result is that the system RPM stays constant.So in essence here is what you have. The throttle control effects propellor pitch by using engine Hp output. The speed control effects propellor pitch by using engine RPM. The two controls work together and independently.
Back to the original question of changing RPM. Keep in mind that every engine has ussually two different RPM's where it is most efficient. One RPM is for the best Hp performance and other RPM is for the best fuel economy.
The pilot generally wants one or the other, fuel economy or max Hp. However; the constant speed / engine throttle will always work the same.Clear as mud?
