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Greg writes:
"What was most distracting; immediate decompression due to loss
of
airspeed indicator. IVP have a safety switch that dumps pressurization
when speed is low to prevent landing with pressure."
I NEVER understood this one. Why would you need such a thing? It is
practically IMPOSSIBLE to taxi a IV-P when it is pressurized and it is
damn difficult to land one with the deck pressure above ambient.
Pressurized air enters the cabin through the sonic venturi which is
essentially a 1/2" diameter hole that connects the engine deck pressure
(between the turbos and the butterfly) to the cabin. There is no check
valve so air will flow from the cabin into the engine if the pressure
differential reverses. Even it there was a check valve, most IVs leak
enough to bleed any differential pressure in seconds.
The airspeed switch should be used to lock out a gear retraction below
67 KIAS, that is it. The only time you may want to be sure that cabin
pressure is dumped is during the takeoff roll. The rapid rise in deck
pressure can overwhelm the outflow valve servo loop and cause some
minor fluctuations in the cabin pressure. Some newbie passengers find
this alarming so I forewarn them. I elected not to use the dump option
on my plane. With over a thousand landings logged, I have never had a
pressurized cabin on rollout, or on short final for that matter. If you
must have a cabin pressure dump then hook it to the gear switch. Greg's
experience shows that connecting the dump function to the airspeed is a
very bad idea.
Regards
Brent Regan
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