Allright allright...hold on here midnight.
"On most boeings, you can start the APU from the nose gear"
Huh? The APU is located far aft, you start it on the overhead panel. I'm guessing you're talking about the ground power connector, which is located close to the nose gear.
Wrong, on the 757 you can start the APU from the nose gear. There are dual controls, one in the flight deck and one in the nose.
You lift up this cover and the controls are there.
Bad part is that you can't hear the APU well at a busy time at the airport while starting because if it does catch on fire, I'd have to continue attempting to start it to blow it out otherwise I'd have to shut it down and deploy the apu fire ext system.
The 767 may have the same setup but I'd have to check it next time.
"Pull the start switch, monitor N1 speed to 3.2% or higher but not to high to grenade the air starter but not to low or it will do a hot start and EGT limits will exceed which will call for a engine inspection."
Always monitor the N2 speed when starting the engines. It's the N2 shaft that gets spooled up by the APU bleed air. It's also the N2 % that determines weither or not you have sufficient gas flow through the turbine
I'm talking about the N1 speeds in FS9 panel, in the default 767/777 panel the N2 speeds are on the 2nd EICAS page while N1 and EGT are on the first.
I rather monitor N1 and EGT instead of constantly switching back to page 2 to see a update of the N2 speed.
Actual N2 speeds are specific to engine types since there's so many types, I'd have to look it up if I need to know if I'm going to do a taxi or engine run.
Like the 757 and the EMB 145 has different N2 speeds for starting and the engine size is a big difference in these two.
But I use N1 as a reference for the start.
And I don't do it often, just once in a while.
The air start is almost like a turbocharger with a shaft connecting to it. The shaft connects to a bevel gear which then goes up 90* vertically into the center of the engine to where N2 spool is, that will be the direct connection there and it will be the first to turn at the start of rotation.
And the air starter has a ratachting merchanism and you may hear it during shutdown when the fan blades are not clanking at each other (some are louder than others), the 777 fan blades do not hit each other.
But if the engine is spinning faster than the air starter, it's automatically disconnected. If not, the air start is engaged when it rotates faster than the shaft that's connected (when starting while the engine is windmilling that is)
The intake of the air starter is designed to "choke" the air if too much is going into it causing the starter to overspeed, but it does not always bulletproof it, it still can grenade apart.
Then there's the shear pin which would shear should the starting system sieze up while the engine is running.
For the 737:
Should the bleed air start valve be InOp, an manual start can be performed by removing the cover, put an socket extenstion in it and with communication set up to the pilots, you turn it and it will manually open the valve but have to shut it off when the pilots say they have sufficient speed otherwise you would not want to be standing next to a generade that will have a high chance of exploding.
I would not do it for my safety. I'm not standing next to a low hung engine on the 737 and right next to the air starter during a manual start.
There's also a N3 spools on RB211 on the 747