by Brett_Henderson » Tue Apr 03, 2007 8:49 pm
Yes...kind of, and yet no. Think of a CVT that would would allow you to go full power up to speed and then, not only let the engine stay at a chosen rpm, but would allow for you to change that rpm without changing throttle setting.
A CVT on a car, snow-mobile or ATV has to allow for extreme vehicle speed changes (including stop and go) and at times, will do it's climbing where there is no low-vehicle-speed limit (where a plane would stall).
If you're cruising along on a CVT vehicle and open up the throttle... the engine will rev higher and THEN the CVT will catch up and you'll go faster. In a constant-speed prop plane, when you open the throttle, the rpms don't change (much)... all that happens is that the pictch changes so that there's more "power" available for say, a climb.
Last edited by
Brett_Henderson on Tue Apr 03, 2007 8:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.