by Flying Mouse » Mon May 04, 2009 12:15 pm
This is why it is so important to start at the bottom of the ladder.
I do not fly tubes in FSX but this is what I can say about the problem:
1) I would guess it safe to assume that your climbing rate would need adjustment at higher altitude.
Flying a small prop you will also find that your rate of climb need to be adjusted taking weather and load into consideration.
2) As Bill have mentioned. You speed indicator reflects 190 Knots but you are flying much faster then 190 knots.
In a small prop your speed is "true airspeed on the ground". As you climb higher the density of the air reduce, meaning the density of the air going into the pitot tube reduces, reflecting a "indicated Air Speed" as your "true Air Speed" will be faster.
This of-course making it hard for me to calculate the required rate of decent (Groundspeed/2 then adding a 0 to obtain appropriate decent in VFR) when I only have the indicated air speed.
I guess that would be the case with tubes too.
Goodluck with a smooth climb
Last edited by
Flying Mouse on Mon May 04, 2009 12:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Coolermaster Storm Enforcer Chassis/ Corsair TX750W PSU/ Gigabyte Ga-990fxa Mobo/ AMD Phenom X4 965 BE 3.4Ghz C3/Coolermaster V6GT CPU air cooler/ 8GB RAM Corsair DDR3 2000Mhz/ Gigabyte GTX570 Overclocked Edition GPU/ Windows 7 Prem 64bit/ 750Gb & 150