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MasterBates said:Retreating Blade Stall Vortex Ring State Translational Lift Gyroscopic Precession
That's N1 RPM, not N2 RPM . . . there is no gauge for the N1 compressor . . .Squid said:i vaguely remember hearing something about 112.4% +/- 4??? i think that's the egt/rpm light...
Well if we are really going to get in the weeds then ... its 112.4 +/-1%.nittany03 said:That's N1 RPM, not N2 RPM . . . there is no gauge for the N1 compressor . . .
And thank you for letting me exercise my inner systems geek. :icon_tong
flygal22 said:AOA stands for Angle of Attack. If the unit for the T34 is 29.5 then the Critical AOA (angle at which the aircraft will stall [stop producing lift]) is 29.5 degrees. The AOA is the angle between the chord line and the relative wind. Chordline being an imaginary line drawn from the leading edge of the wing to the trailing edge (front to back).
While you can change the AOA in flight you cannot change the Critical AOA (the airplane will always stall at 29.5 degrees)
*This is assuming the military measures the same as civilian.*
Hope that helps.