4Whitey wrote:Dirtstrip, you're right, you don't hear much about service ceiling but I think it's an good number to consider when you think about takeoff performance at higher density altitudes....At it's ceiling of 21,500 feet, at gross, it's keeping 2550 pounds aloft on 85hp (minus 3% hp per 1000'), thats not too shabby.
Ceiling is definitely related to excess horsepower (climb horsepower), and how the plane may react to different load/DA conditions.
Another calculation you can make is to use glide angle, Vy, and weight. For my 182, I get about 7.8:1 glide ratio at 86 mph at gross. That means the plane is going down at 4.9 m/s, and at 2800 lbs, that means I'm burning off gravity energy during descent at the rate of about 82 hp (sounds suspiciously close to the 85 hp mentioned above, doesn't it? They are measuring very close to the same thing!).
That is the minimum power required to stay in the air for the Skylane. So at 6000 feet, where the book says the engine produces 77% power, or 177 hp, I have roughly 90 hp left to climb with. That means I can theoretically make 2800 lbs go upwards at 1060 feet per minute. In reality, I get around 720 feet per minute, and that means my propeller is only about 69% efficient in converting shaft horsepower into thrust after beating the air into submission, which happens to be about exactly right from the Mcauley data for my 2-bladed prop (71% book value). In any case, you can use this info to fill in the blanks of a POH.