Turbo Normalized Mooney M20F | 6 month Update
2024 ж. 28 Қаң.
1 947 Рет қаралды
I am 6 months into ownership with this plane. Operationally it is inexpensive to run and uses less fuel on trips than my Cherokee 140 did over the same distance. The only catch is the cost of insurance...
Great stuff Zent! The effort put into filming different angles is appreciated. Fly safe!
Thanks, I appreciate it
Super cool video man! Makes me want to get my pilot's license!
Thanks. You should do it!
Interesting video! Question: what do you think of the Risen 915 experimental aircraft?
Thanks. I am not familiar with that airplane.
Wheels in the Sky have done a great video of it here in the States. @@ZentRose
Pretty interesting video. How did you decide to get a plane? I don’t remember if you talked about it at the time when you got it
I couldn't rent a turbocharged airplane for a reasonable rate and I consider it a mandatory safety item for flying on the west coast. I also use the hangar as shop space for my cars now.
@@ZentRose That makes sense. Thanks!
Subbed for Mooney content! I’m currently looking at a ‘68 M20F with the turbo normalizer STC. Any pro tips or gotchas?
It is important to brief flight instructors on the POH supplement settings. Turbo bootstrapping will occur if you are not careful with engaging the wastegate during high density altitude takeoffs. I shot a video of it at big bear and will get it up soon.
@@ZentRose Sweet, thanks! Anything I should look for when inspecting the aircraft? Obviously will have a Mooney A&P do the pre-buy, but if there's anything I can call out initially, it could save the hassle. :) Also... in one of your Mooney videos (I watched all of them last night) you mentioned a govt. subsidy for aircraft storage? Where can I learn more about that?
With Mooneys specifically, the tank reseal is expensive if the tanks are leaking. Then look at when landing discs were last replaced and also look at the prop hub ( the recurring AD can get expensive and many Mooneys have already upgraded the hub). There is also a corrosion issue for the cockpit cage (I think the service bulletin is 208b)@@NimblyJimbly
@@ZentRose thanks! Great info. 🙏🏼
Why full rich with the turbo? I would think you'd still want to lean the mixture so that the air/fuel ratio isn't sending un-combusted fuel out the exhaust. And also, have fun with the instrument rating. It's really really different. And it's a *LOT* of new information, but instrument flying is incredibly cool! You get to see things that - in the history of humanity - very very few people have seen.
Thanks man. It's in the Rajay POH supplement without explanation. The reasoning is probably because the power level is over 75% at the max climb settings and you'd likely damage the engine leaning at the 80 to 85% power level. When in cruise up high I will lean it out. I like to cruise up high staying under 65% power with about 7gph fuel burn. The air is nice and smooth and the plane has an incredible range at those settings.
Doesn’t a turbo normalized engine have an automatic wastegate that keeps it at sea level manifold until you reach the critical altitude? Seems like your plane is turbocharged but not normalized. And yes I am jealous of your turbo.
This is just the Rajay Turbo Normalizer STC for Mooney. The turbocharged Mooneys are entirely different beasts (and much faster than my plane).
Please do not switch tanks after the run up. That's a good way to lose your engine in the upwind. Switch right after startup or don't bother at all
No, switch after taxi before run up