Throttle 'pressure drop' considerations may be contingent on carburetion/fuel-mix bleed/venturi concerns..
For fighter engines requiring rapid response to throttle inputs, large/slow turbo spool-up 'lag' was an issue..
Here is a graph comparing pressure and temperature shown along a turboshaft engine. Look what happens to the exhaust gasses as they expand through the turbines. I have a better diagram and explanation in another book however I leant it out to somebody so I'll have to get it back before I can take a picture of it.Tommy Cookers wrote:why would the temperature be lower ?gruntguru wrote:But velocity will be lower because volume flow is lower because specific volume is lower because temperature is lower.
P&W knew there would be "some" thrust. If it was only half I wouldn't categorise it as "competitive" (the term used by trini)
the mean exhaust pressure above the turbine is far higher than the the mean exhaust pressure in the MS engine
and why should velocity be the dominant factor ?
for a given energy the thrust will be greater with lower velocity and higher pressure ( via momentum/Froude ? efficiency)
unrelated .....
the Corliss throttle (re Merlin era) was chosen via needing less force from the operator and 'had a smaller pressure drop'
I have in the past asked 'experts' whether or not the necessary property of a throttle is to drop pressure
This isn't actually totally true as many many fighter pilots, especially of planes like the spitfire with its automatic boost control, put the plane to full power and then left it there for most of the manoeuvres in dogfighting. Generally they were only throttled back if dive speeds got to high or engine over heating or doing certain manoeuvres.J.A.W. wrote:Throttle 'pressure drop' considerations may be contingent on carburetion/fuel-mix bleed/venturi concerns..
For fighter engines requiring rapid response to throttle inputs, large/slow turbo spool-up 'lag' was an issue..
Temperature is lower because energy is removed by the turbine - that's thermodynamics. The mean exhaust TEMP above the turbine is NOT far higher than the the mean exhaust TEMP in the MS engine. It may be a little higher but after expansion in the turbine the final temperature is much lower. For temperatures in a high PR turbo-compund cycle see page 11 of http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi. ... 001160.pdfTommy Cookers wrote:why would the temperature be lower ?gruntguru wrote:But velocity will be lower because volume flow is lower because specific volume is lower because temperature is lower.
P&W knew there would be "some" thrust. If it was only half I wouldn't categorise it as "competitive" (the term used by trini)
the mean exhaust pressure above the turbine is far higher than the the mean exhaust pressure in the MS engine
and why should velocity be the dominant factor ?
for a given energy the thrust will be greater with lower velocity and higher pressure ( via momentum/Froude ? efficiency)
unrelated .....
the Corliss throttle (re Merlin era) was chosen via needing less force from the operator and 'had a smaller pressure drop'
I have in the past asked 'experts' whether or not the necessary property of a throttle is to drop pressure
in support of the above, consider that with (extreme) altitude the turbo exit nozzle was restricted by manual adjustmentTommy Cookers wrote:IMO the turbo potentially has competitive exhaust thrust ......
because the mean exhaust pressure downstream of the turbine is not lower than in the mechanically supercharged engine
because the mean exhaust pressure above the turbine will be higher or much higher than in the MS engine
and because P&W thought so, they did the VDT
A former co-worker (who flew P-47s in WW2) told me that there was a placard saying .....trinidefender wrote:This isn't actually totally true as many many fighter pilots, especially of planes like the spitfire with its automatic boost control, put the plane to full power and then left it there for most of the manoeuvres in dogfighting.J.A.W. wrote: .... For fighter engines requiring rapid response to throttle inputs, large/slow turbo spool-up 'lag' was an issue..
........Generally they were only throttled back if dive speeds got to high or engine over heating or doing certain manoeuvres.
That was an aircraft specific problem though. Most of those fighters were designed so that adding a bunch of throttle added in some pitch up moment. Therefore it makes me think that the placard was there so when the pilot throttles up it slowly pulls the plane out of the dive. Not much else you can do if you are going fast enough to hit compressibility problems.Tommy Cookers wrote:A former co-worker (who flew P-47s in WW2) told me that there was a placard saying .....trinidefender wrote:This isn't actually totally true as many many fighter pilots, especially of planes like the spitfire with its automatic boost control, put the plane to full power and then left it there for most of the manoeuvres in dogfighting.J.A.W. wrote: .... For fighter engines requiring rapid response to throttle inputs, large/slow turbo spool-up 'lag' was an issue..
........Generally they were only throttled back if dive speeds got to high or engine over heating or doing certain manoeuvres.
'if control difficulties occur at high ias remove hands and feet from the controls and open throttle fully'
this was for compressibility issues making dives uncontainable - to prevent over-stressing or runaway rpm from prop pitch problems
he tried this situation and so by accident entered his airfield circuit at about 500 mph
low or negative g can affect pitch control, very bad in 2 blade props (eg if the blades can go to different pitches)
also quick movements of (the pilot) pitch control can be bad, they can produce instant engine detonation even in light aircraft
in flight throttling up or down does not change the engines rpm, the pitch control keeps rpm constant
ime the throttle is mostly left alone when away from the airfield
I think he is speaking of Pratt & Whitney's VDT engines. The turbo speed was controlled by a nozzle, which controls the mass air flow through the system.trinidefender wrote:As far as I'm aware, all the turbocharged WWII aero engines controlled their turbo rpm through the use of a conventional wastegate. Is your suggestion that turbo rpm could be governed by the use of a variable exhaust outlet? If so wouldn't this cause quite large back pressure issues?
I was more referring to in production aero engines. I should do more reading about those VDT engines. Don't know to much about them.wuzak wrote:I think he is speaking of Pratt & Whitney's VDT engines. The turbo speed was controlled by a nozzle, which controls the mass air flow through the system.trinidefender wrote:As far as I'm aware, all the turbocharged WWII aero engines controlled their turbo rpm through the use of a conventional wastegate. Is your suggestion that turbo rpm could be governed by the use of a variable exhaust outlet? If so wouldn't this cause quite large back pressure issues?
It wokred on teh test benchm but in flight needed constant adjustment by the flight engineer, because there was no control system at the time tot could deal wth it.
Well the higher you got the faster the turbocharger would have to spin to maintain boost pressure and of course it isn't tied to the engine so nothing slowing it down. Especially with the greater pressure differential at the turbine from the low pressure outside at high altitude. As far as I am aware, turbo over speed was a constant concern for many pilots running at high power settings at high altitude.Tommy Cookers wrote:@ both
pilot training films show that P-47 turbo rpm had to be limited by pilot action in response to a graduated flashing light
this at high&rising altitude, compressor load was falling but exhaust pressure:atmospheric pressure differential increasing
100000rpm+ ?
the pilot mentioned is now deceased from natural causes, and the war was a sensitive topic
he survived flying a Spit 14 with reversed aileron cables (then fittings were made foolproof)
Spit 14s were limited to 3 lb boost takeoff as torque overloaded 1 wheel and tyres burst (so he tried a 0 boost takeoff - 'once !')
OT topic - many planes eg Merlin Mustang, most Spits had more prop pitch at low flight speeds than useful for thrust
simply to absorb the power and contain the rpm when the pilot opened up (these airframes were intended for about 1100hp)
this was a large part of the infamous torque problem in this situation
airframes intended for around 2000 hp eg Corsair and P-47 had bigger props
fine pitch is by even today's definition for takeoff and landing use, so whatever the combat pitch was called it was not called fine
downwind checks are iirc ..... B-U-M-P-F-F ..... where P means means pitch selection 'fine'
fighters preferred to avoid low rpm cruise, being scared of plug fouling
I had quite a lot of Pitts etc time and a little Harvard time, you really do leave the throttle alone most of the time
there's a manifold pressure gauge, this is useful for setting the (uncalibrated) pitch control
but the prop has much more braking (when throttled back) effect than a fixed pitch prop
this is useful in many aircraft (the Boeng 247 designed around this) but an underpublicised danger in light, draggy aircraft
throttle movement from closed to rather open and back when landing can cause engine stall from overpitch (I did it in a Decathlon)
at Kissimee they had 2 TF-51s available (with a minder) to anyone, presumably they still have them