Uhh, no frank. Mixture just sets what the fuel/air mix is. If you want to go faster or accelerate quick, you go to full rich, max RPM, full manifold pressure. A good read on mixture...
http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182084-1.htmlA quick note on mixture:
As your altitude increases your mixture must be leaned out. Why? Fuel/air mix. If you leave the mixture control in full rich and climb to 10k (sans turbo anyway) there isn't enough air to burn off all that gas. Too lean to burn. Add in a turbo and you get full sea-level air density clear up to 20k. So you really don't have to fiddle with the mixture a whole lot. The automatic systems (in nearly every WW2 US AC) worked by sensing what the altitude pressure was, and setting the mixture automatically based on that. While modern four-bangers (like HiTech's RV-8) have to fiddle with mixture, anyone in a P-38/47/51 had to do was drop it into Auto-Lean and leave it.
As for prop control, yes it is modeled. Lower engine RPMs mean a much sharper pitch on the prop blades. At high altitude, an RPM setting of 2,700 would let you go, but not fast. The air is too thin for that "fast" of a blade pitch. The higher you go the lower you need the RPMs to be, so the prop can take a nice-sized bite of the thinner air.
I'm running a test in FS2k2 at the moment regarding props and mixture on a Mooney Bravo with a turbo system. I'll post the results shortly.
-=Edit=-
Test results:
35" MAP used (max 40") for test. Pressure 29.92, 54º F sea-level temp, no wind.
5k: 2200 RPM, rich, 15.84 GPH, 151.7 knots
5k: 2200 RPM, lean, 12.1 GPH, 154.4 knots
12k: 2200 RPM, lean, 9.93 GPH, 132.5 knots
12k: 2500 RPM, lean, 10.49 GPH, 138 knots
15k: 2500 RPM, lean, 14.83 GPH, 156.5 knots, TAS 189 knots
15k: 2200 RPM, lean, 13.27 GPH, 148.4 knots
15k: 2500 RPM, very lean, 8.68 GPH, 122.3 knots, TAS 151 knots
Rich fuel burn for the Bravo is 18-22 GPH producing 270 HP. The mixture had to be set manually, but otherwise the AC did fine when I left it alone. 2200 RPM checks were for a comparison between cutting RPM and leaving it at max. Max (2500) produced higher speeds, but also burned a touch more gas. Leaning it to 14 GPH or so, then pulling the RPM back ended up giving the best range/speed combo. Fuel burn could've been lowered further if I pulled MAP back to around 30". The only diff between operating the Bravo's engine, and running a Packard-Merlin, is the auto-mixture function on the Merlin.
The turbocharger doesn't really cut in until around 9k or so. Below that there's a gap where pulling RPM is the only way to run it lean enough to fly a long ways. Above 9k the turbo really kicked in and I started testing at full RPM. In a real cruise situation you'd probably lean it to 14 GPH, pull the prop back to 2300 RPM, and reduce MAP to around 30". Doing this at 15k would let you go a long ways! The Bravo has an 89 gal fuel capacity, with 84 being useable. 84 gallons at 8.68 GPH, 151 knots TAS, would let you fly 1464.7 nauticle miles in 9 hours and 40 some-odd minutes.
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Flakbait [Delta6]
Delta Six's Flight SchoolPut the P-61B in Aces High