Postby jwocky » Mon May 16, 2016 8:08 pm
Yeah, a part of the difference is that sparkfaildrop is basically already in the manufacturer's data
When I have a problem with fuel consumption, I have a list of possible suspects, not all are actually engine related, but that is what I look at:
- bsfc/Sparkfaildrop (yeah, I fell for that too occasionally)
- propeller pitch, propeller gear ration
Propeller pitch means usually, you need a lot of rpm to hold the speed, gear ratio shows often in too high propeller rpm and actually less throttle used by the AP to compensate for thie more in rpm (you still use a lot of fuel because the engine has to work hard to spin the propeller at those rpms)
- manifold pressure (especially if you have turbos)
- plane balance (pressure point/CoG)
That needs a little bit of explanation because it works around two corners: A plane that in cruise altitude sits always nose up has a higher drag. So, if you are on autopilot, the AP compensates for it with more throttle, more throttle, diminished by mixture setting, means more fuel consumption. Now, in a plane like the Pup, where the heavy motor sits in front, a more or less heavy pilot sits still relative far forward and everything that comes after that is build light, you have more of a dart behaviour that is compensated by the vertical stabilizer. The lesser you have to compensate with the elevators, the less drag. The trick is, that those small planes have often a much bigger relation between vertical stabilizer area and wing area or a thicker stabi to produce a little overproportional lift. The other way is to set the CoG accordingly, but that sucks a little because the CoG changes over the time of a flight when fuel is burnt.
- drag per se
A lot of planes in FG get a lot of drag. Usually, it brings a better fuel consumption to have less drag on the regular hull and wings and more on flaps and speed brakes (if there are some of those)
- lift per se
The usual aeromatics lift calculation is a bit on the weak side in many cases. It calculates with kind of a standard wing profile, but in modern planes, there are sometimes more optimized profiles used which prude more lift out of smaller area (because the wing profile is thicker at the thickest point, because manipulated wing tips prevent disruptions of the stream profile). Too little lift leads to too high pitch, which leads to more fuel consumption at cruise.
- and in my case the usual typo and I have not seen it list
Drag coefficient for retracted wheels sits on 9.0 instead of 0.0. same for flaps, spoilers, speed brakes
Lift ... same thing only vice versa.
Flaps 0 became accidentally flaps 1
Bottom line is, if everything is right, the BSFC is usually (with use of sparkfaildrop) somewhere around BSFC from the manufacturer *0.88 give or take, in my experience. With such a big difference, I suspect fligh attitude or something with the propeller.
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