I suspect Glidergeek is getting a chuckle at our expense…
M6RV6 wrote:bigrenna wrote:Im not sure.... Looks like the best data point is at 80mph / 500' per min sink (no flap) netting a 14:1 glide.
-425/70? Longest time in air. the 80/500 farthest glide??

For a stol guy, best glide can be very counter intuitive… As slow as you can be, can be bad, as light as you can be, can be bad, and headwinds are the antichrist.
Yes re the chart bigr is correct, because in this context we are looking for distance, not time. Longer in the air won't yield that distance at a speed too slow. Best glide (LD max) for most of these airplanes will occur somewhere between Vy and Vx, since these two speeds will change with mods and drag, they will conveniently change your best glide speed to match. Knowing those speeds is going to be tremendously more efficient than trying to reference a chart, and likely far more accurate. Remember, best glide, unlike some other 'V' speeds is going to be fluid. It will change (sometimes dramatically) with weight, and will be
faster as you get heavier (remember gliders have ballast to address this). And again, the headwinds that make us look like rockstars on landing will have a tremendous impact on our engine out gliding
DISTANCE (not speed). Lastly, every mod you do to change the lift, or drag profile (this essentially means
EVERYTHING we do to our airplanes) will effect your best glide… after all it occurs at LD Max. Consequently, if the rule of thumb I suggested isn't accurate enough for you, using a chart developed for a bone stock airplane (or any airplane other than yours) isn't going to yield any more accuracy. In this case I'd suggest a beautiful spring morning spent over a dry lake bed or malpais flat. It can be a very enjoyable way to increase your skill and consciousness of exactly what your airplane is capable of.
And yes to MTV's suggestion of pulling the prop,
IF the engine doesn't lock up, and
IF you didn't dump all of your oil overboard (two common occurrences in a full blown engine out), you will enjoy a
much greater glide distance / speed by pulling that prop. But again, my suggestion would be to plan on pulling it, but don't paint yourself into a corner banking on it responding.
Lastly, IMHO while knowing your best glide is golden information, in a full blown engine out scenario, picking the safest place to park it
immediately, is a far better plan than 'knowing you can glide "X" miles and then coming up a skosh short due to one of the zillion things that can affect your best glide, consequently parking it on the street in front of the airport
Take care, Rob