C170 Fuel Flow
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I was looking into a C170 with a continental, and the owner said they get around 110mph at 8-9gph.
If I weren't headed anywhere fast, is there anything wrong with prolonged flight at lower RPMs to decrease fuel flow?
I was looking at a Citabria, and it seems that according to the POH you can run it around 2000rpm to keep at at about 100mph and 5gph if you're not in a rush. What about the same thing with a Lycoming?
Thanks,
Jesse
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PilotRPI offline
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I've got a stock 170A. I'll run the C-145 at 2250, at 3500-4500 msl and burn ~6gph. She'll give me 90-95 knots, but carb ice is even more of an issue than normal operating like that.
YMMV. (literally)
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TonyG offline
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Besides, always know which way your aeroplane is pointed.
Mon Jun 18, 2012 10:26 pm
in my experience continentals run at low power settings start burning oil.
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River rat offline


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tricycles are for little girls
You can plan on 7.5GPH for 90% of your flying at approx 100KTS turning 2450RPM. Obviously you can pull it back and save more.
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jugheadF15 offline


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Ya I saw consistently 7.5 gph and 110 mph TAS with a climb/cruse prop. #2 cylinder likes to fail Went thru 2 of them in 550 hours.
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Glidergeek offline


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DG 400
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Any issues with running a lycoming O-320 at low power settings for long periods?
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PilotRPI offline
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jugheadF15 wrote:You can plan on 7.5GPH for 90% of your flying at approx 100KTS turning 2450RPM. Obviously you can pull it back and save more.
That was my experience with my C170 also.
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hotrod180 offline


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Cessna Skywagon -- accept no substitute!
We have C170B with 145hp O-300 and seaplane propeller. In normal cruise its fuel flow is a bit over 6gph, 2450rpm and 92KTS. It is possible to fly even slower, but it is quite slow then.

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wingman offline
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