Jmmccutc
Go away Peg.
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2003
- Posts
- 514
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In other words the Commander cannot carry what the King Air carries nor does it have the room. The commander does outperform the King Air in other areas, however only when it is not down in the shop for maintenance.jergar999 said:To second pilotyips comments, I fly King Airs full time and have a part time Commander gig with a local company. The Commander outperforms the King Air in almost every category except room and useful load.
yeah ours was down constantly...thanks for the answers, you guys just afirmed what i already thought...satpak77 said:In other words the Commander cannot carry what the King Air carries nor does it have the room. The commander does outperform the King Air in other areas, however only when it is not down in the shop for maintenance.
Yes.wrigley23 said:Why are Garrett engines so freakin loud when at idle? It seems when on the T/O roll they quiet down a bit. Anyone who has been around a Turbo Commander/MU-2/or B100 on the ramp knows that your teeth will rattle. Does it have something to do with the direct drive? Just curious.
I thought the King Airs (and Caravans) used a fluid coupling from the turbine to the prop.EatSleepFly said:At max. power the engine shaft is turning at 41,730 RPM while the prop is 2000 RPM. If you spin the prop one full revolution, and look at the first stage compressor, it will spin around almost 21 times for each complete turn of the prop. Thats a lot of reduction gearing!
The B100 has Garrett engines, which are direct drive and quite a bit different than those found the other King Airs or a Caravan. The engine speed is very high, and the prop speed is relatively low. The RPM reduction (shaft to prop) is acheived through a reduction gearbox. You set power with the power levers. You set prop/engine speed with engine speed levers. The speed levers set operating speed of the prop governor. The governor changes prop blade angles as necessary to maintain that selected engine/prop speed. Clear as mud?johnpeace said:I thought the King Airs (and Caravans) used a fluid coupling from the turbine to the prop.
Does the fluid coupler spin at 1:1 with the turbine shaft, and then prop RPM is controlled through gear reduction and a RPM governor?
How does it work?
Yeah, thanks..I am really fascinated about this stuff and love learning more.EatSleepFly said:Clear as mud?
So, given that understanding of 'air free turbine engines' why aren't they 'fluid coupled'?avbug said:These are not "fluid coupled" but air free turbine engines. What you have is a turbine engine blowing exhaust gasses on a turbine that's connected to the propeller. The propeller isn't driven mechanically by the engine, but by exhaust gasses being expelled from the engine. As exhaust gasses exit the combustion chamber, they turn the engine power turbine, which turns the compressor wheel.
lol, OK...so I am taking it that the more technically correct and universally accepted name is 'air free turbine'.avbug said:You call it whatever you like, John. It probably won't hurt a thing.