avbug said:
I'm pretty busy with little time to answer, but you're incorrect.
Clamp your hand over a vacum cleaner, note the absolute pressure in the hose. Lift your hand off, note hte pressure. It rises. Same as opening the throttle. Lift your hand partially off, note an intermediate pressure.
Put your hand back over the hose, same as closing the throttle. Note the pressure. Same as before. Now slow down the speed of the vacum impeller. Same as decreasing engine RPM. Less suction, higher manifold pressure.
It has nothing to do with airflow velocity through the induction system and an attendant pressure rise or drop.
Clamping my hand over the hose is the same as closing the throttle plate, which the OP was not doing. He is asking about MP rise due to RPM reduction. Keep in mind I am talking about a carb system not fuel injected.
If you can point to another Fluid Dynamics Law that states otherwise, Bernoulli is the only law that explains the action of fluids and pressure changes, for constant energy and density anyway.
Here is the equation, simplified to prove it.
P1 + V(one)squared = P2 + V(two)squared. (that is bernoullis equation simplified to remove all the constants)
Take the same airplane where P1 is 2700 RPM and P2 is 2200 RPM. We know the pressures, manifold pressure. What we dont know is the velocity. You argue that velocity and pressure have nothing to do, but I will show below how the higher pressure (lower RPM) has the slower velocity.
2700 RPM = 26" MP
2200 RPM = 30" MP
26 + V(one)squared = 30 + V(two)squared
V(one)squared = 4 + V(two)squared
This shows that the 2200 RPM setting has a slower velocity, thus higher pressure, in the induction system. This is true, since Bernoullis principle states that in a closed system air travelling at a lower velocity, with the same density, kinetic engergy, etc, must have a higher pressure.
Its all conservation of energy stuff. Now, unless you can point to some other law of Fluid Dynamics, and I havent been able to find one in my books, that states otherwise, this is what is happening in the system.
It is true that the engine is just a big air pump, but that air is still has to obey basic laws of physics as it travels through the manifold and bernoulli is it.
If I cover the end of a vaccum cleaner the pressure drops because it becomes a vaccum, all the air is sucked out. Thats not what happens when you move the prop levers to a lower RPM, you simply slow the velocity of the air down as it is entering the manifold.