Beechcraft Baron 58

Forum dedicated to Microsoft FS2004 - "A Century of Flight".

Beechcraft Baron 58

Postby est89 » Sat Apr 09, 2005 2:30 pm

I have a problem with a Baron 58, or I don't know how to climb hight...

acording as a specification of the baron 58, it can fly up 20.000 feets more or less... but, when I arrive to 10.000 feets more or less, It's too difficult to continue climb...

I have the cowl's flaps open, I use de autopilot in climb of 500 feets per minute...

What I do wrong ?

T.I.A.

pd: sorry for my poor english...

Ernesto Aides
Ashdod - Israel
est89
Ground hog
Ground hog
 
Posts: 4
Joined: Sat Apr 09, 2005 3:18 pm
Location: Ashdod - Israel

Re: Beechcraft Baron 58

Postby Brett_Henderson » Sat Apr 09, 2005 2:58 pm

Do you have "Auto mixture" set in the realism settings ?

If not.. you need to lean the mixture as you climb. If it's left full-rich.. the engines won't have much power at all at 10,000 feet.

I use fuel-flow (try to keep it peaked as you climb) as a gauge. You're supposed to use EGT, but M$ didn't see fit to make that parameter function properly or appear accurately on a gauge.

Hope that helps
Brett_Henderson
Major
Major
 
Posts: 3403
Joined: Fri Oct 08, 2004 7:09 am

Re: Beechcraft Baron 58

Postby jknight8907 » Sat Apr 09, 2005 6:02 pm

Reduce the weight some. At max gross weight, you probably won't make it to the service ceiling in a reasonable amount of time.

Leaning the mixture is important too, as Brett said. The EGT gauge doesn't work like it does in real life ("as real as it get"? I think not.). So either watch for the manifold pressure to peak out as you press Ctrl+Shift+F2, or listen to the engine to find when it gets back to full loudness. Also you'll need to increase your throttle setting as you climb higher.
Image
It is better to remain silent and be considered a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.

There were once four people named Everybody, Somebody, Nobody and A
User avatar
jknight8907
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
 
Posts: 435
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:15 pm


Return to FS 2004 - A Century of Flight

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 267 guests