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Single Engine Airspeed

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Starship
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  • S Offline
    S Offline
    Sunake
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Hi, Is this rectangle at the 110kts position supposed to be the single engine best rate of climb speed?

    If it is, I thought it should be at 130kts and reduce by 0.55 knots every 1000ft climb but it seems to always be at the 110kts position.

    spd.jpg

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    • P Offline
      P Offline
      ProfCrash
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      Airspeed is located in the AFM 2-4 for reference.
      image.png

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      • J Offline
        J Offline
        jmarkows
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        Doesn't surprise me it's fixed, it's usually painted on the gauge itself with an analog six pack on a twin, isn't it?

        Plus, do you really want to be climbing high enough for that to matter with one engine out?

        S 1 Reply Last reply
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        • J jmarkows

          Doesn't surprise me it's fixed, it's usually painted on the gauge itself with an analog six pack on a twin, isn't it?

          Plus, do you really want to be climbing high enough for that to matter with one engine out?

          S Offline
          S Offline
          Sunake
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @jmarkows said in Single Engine Airspeed:

          Doesn't surprise me it's fixed, it's usually painted on the gauge itself with an analog six pack on a twin, isn't it?

          Plus, do you really want to be climbing high enough for that to matter with one engine out?

          Yeah on analog gauges it's fixed, but Starship is modern technology, the manual suggest it should be dynamic based on altitude.

          Even if I wouldn't be climbing high enough for it to make a difference as you say, for one, it's at the wrong position, iit ought to be around 130, and secondly if I'm taking off from an airport that's 12,000ft in elevation it should be at 124kts instead of 130, which would probably make a big difference in being able to climb.

          RandolfR 1 Reply Last reply
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          • S Sunake

            @jmarkows said in Single Engine Airspeed:

            Doesn't surprise me it's fixed, it's usually painted on the gauge itself with an analog six pack on a twin, isn't it?

            Plus, do you really want to be climbing high enough for that to matter with one engine out?

            Yeah on analog gauges it's fixed, but Starship is modern technology, the manual suggest it should be dynamic based on altitude.

            Even if I wouldn't be climbing high enough for it to make a difference as you say, for one, it's at the wrong position, iit ought to be around 130, and secondly if I'm taking off from an airport that's 12,000ft in elevation it should be at 124kts instead of 130, which would probably make a big difference in being able to climb.

            RandolfR Offline
            RandolfR Offline
            Randolf
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @Sunake did you notice the document posted above? It's not single engine climb, but minimum control speed and It's at the correct position.

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            • RandolfR Randolf

              @Sunake did you notice the document posted above? It's not single engine climb, but minimum control speed and It's at the correct position.

              S Offline
              S Offline
              Sunake
              wrote last edited by Sunake
              #6

              @Randolf said in Single Engine Airspeed:

              @Sunake did you notice the document posted above? It's not single engine climb, but minimum control speed and It's at the correct position.

              Yeah I saw. The minimum control speed is 94 knots right? That would be the red rectangle, I am talking about the blue rectangle half way between 100kts and 120kts

              RandolfR 1 Reply Last reply
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              • S Sunake

                @Randolf said in Single Engine Airspeed:

                @Sunake did you notice the document posted above? It's not single engine climb, but minimum control speed and It's at the correct position.

                Yeah I saw. The minimum control speed is 94 knots right? That would be the red rectangle, I am talking about the blue rectangle half way between 100kts and 120kts

                RandolfR Offline
                RandolfR Offline
                Randolf
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @Sunake ah, blue rectangle, sorry, my bad. You didn't mention the color 🙂

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                • Black SquareB Offline
                  Black SquareB Offline
                  Black Square
                  Black Square Developer
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  I must have lost this many versions ago, but it's easy enough that I just reprogrammed it instead of looking for how it used to work. All set for v1.2. Thanks for pointing it out. It's so easy to miss the most obvious things when you spend all day looking for the minutia.

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                  • S Offline
                    S Offline
                    SinkRate
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    Just so we're all on the same page, and I'm sure @Black-Square Nick knows this, but the blue line displayed on the ASI DOES in fact move down as the airplane climbs and vis versa. It's not a fixed line.

                    If you watch this video, you can literally watch it move as the airplane descends.
                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZ675phte58

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