A big thanks to everyone on and off the list for their feedback on these questions. It’s very helpful. We’ll see how she performs before moving out on turbo charging. Glad we made our AC removable…
Always remember Gail Jensen, her and Art live in Colorado, saying their Legacy, “Flies like a homesick angel!” So figured it can’t be too much of a dog at altitude… J
Valin Thorn
From: Lancair Mailing List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Valin & Allyson Thorn
Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2014 8:19 AM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: [LML] Legacy Takeoff Performance at High Elevation Airports?
Hey LML gang,
With an eye toward practicing instrument approaches, I downloaded the RealAir Lancair Legacy airplane model for Flight Simulator X. I’ll send a separate LML post asking about its accuracy to focus that particular discussion. I was impressed, though, with its apparent flight performance fidelity in general.
With our Legacy still under construction, it was interesting to fly the simulated Legacy out of our new airport base in Colorado at the Rocky Mountain Metro Airport (KBJC) near Boulder (former Jeffco) with a field elevation of about 5673 ft MSL. Fortunately the longest runway is about 9000 ft long. Even with that, if the Legacy sim model is fairly accurate, it has me concerned about takeoff performance especially during summers with density altitudes as high as around 9000 ft. With a naturally aspirated engine we’ll be looking at only about 24“ of manifold pressure at full throttle and the thinner air for the prop and wings...
So my question is, what kind of takeoff performance are Legacy pilots seeing at high elevation airports – take off rollout, climb rates, etc.? This has us thinking about at least turbo-normalizing our IO-550 engine… For those with turbo-chargers, what kind of improvement in performance are you seeing at high elevation airports?
Also, how are pilots adjusting their takeoff technique at high elevations. In comparing the sim Legacy at sea level and in Colorado, and being on the back side of the power curve below about 120 kts, it helps to delay take off rotation speed at high elevation in the sim. Real world…?
Thanks,
Valin Thorn
Legacy Project
Boulder, Colorado