He not only owns the company but the Comanche 250 that is modeled is the one that A2A/Scott owns in the real world. The simulated version is as close to the real thing as you can probably get without full motion and vr.@@alexanderfiebrandt6732
This aircraft has blown my mind. It's not overly complicated but the attention to detail in every aspect makes it a constant joy to pilot. Thankyou for your outstanding work.
Scott, thank you so much for everything you, and your team, do for our flightsimulation genre. It is truly appreciated sir. These informative videos are absolutely incredible.
I love these videos, they also feel very personal and not just some marketing to make money. I love this plane and hope to see many more from you guys. Truly a BIG and well deserved thank you to all who worked on this project.
I discovered the Comanche a couple of days ago from a UA-camr called Huddison. I purchased it right after watching the video and did a couple of patterns with touch and go. An amazing machine and now I'm watching these videos that make the experience even better. Will I be flying anything else from now on? I don't know. Thank you for the products and the videos...not to forget the manual.
Coming back to MSFS after 20 years… what a welcome. This plane takes the game and elevates it beyond the sum of its parts - bravo. I really appreciate these videos too, brings personality to the experience.
Scott, you have a gift for teaching. Your passion for aviation makes it way to each and every video you produce. Great work. A2A might want to consider producing ground school courses for real-world pilots in training!
More than one year with the Comanche, my first A2A plane, and I'm watching this just for fun. Thanks to flying and learning the Comanche, from videos like this one and the A2A forums, I, a non-pilot, have learned a lot about operating real aircraft. I have to say that buying the Comanche has transformed my simming experience and taken it to another level. I can't wait for the Aerostar!
I love this aircraft. On my worldtour, because of critical icing over greenland, i had to land nearly without sight of ground, only the last 2 seconds, but my comanche didn't left me, we landed safely on the glacier. The icing effect in flightmodel and visual is stunning.
Engine management is taught in all flight schools but understanding the depths of why it’s important isn’t something you hear about from most FI’s. If you wanna know about proper engine management go speak to the aircraft techs. They are a wealth of knowledge for any student / new / old pilot. I learned more in an hour speaking to the techs than I did in any ground school.
These tutorials are going to invaluable to me as I make my first steps in learning about flying this marvel of engineering. Scott, you and your team deserve every accolade going !
Scott you’re a absolute star. Just had my first real flight in your Comanche and wish I’d watch this before hand. One cylinder got a bit hot for a few minutes. Best simulation ever. Thanks.
As someone who literally never touches GA and sticks to the tubes, this plane is making me truly adore the GA world. Loving these vids as for someone new to GA, it's amazing
Imo this is the only aircraft in MSFS that actually feels like it’s flying and not just a digital representation. Amazing work A2A you truly achieved something incredible with this aircraft.
A2A " You are the dream we are looking for in the world of the aviation industry.. Previously, now and in the future.. We demand more of the magic that you create for us..
Great tutorial! I also have a personal limit of 400 degrees on those cylinders. Before seeing this video I’d just increase my speed and keep the mixture as rich as possible….It’s an interesting thing to manage because in the heat you also have to lean to make best power, but I’d sacrifice some power for lower temps! :)
This aircraft is unbelievable! The experience of seeing the engine suddenly stop right after takeoff, out of nowhere, left me astonished! Congratulations to A2A for the incredible work! And let's get to studying!
As a non rl pilot. Fairly new to flight sim and very new to the commanche ... I found these videos so interesting and wish for more in depth videos about the plane. Thankyou!
Scott, supurb. I love this aircraft. Please keep the tutorials coming, not being a PPL I really learned from this one. I was wondering why I destroyed two cylinders already.
Much appreciated. The Comanche 250 is my favourite GA aircraft in MSFS. I need to look after it !. The realism is amazing. Keep up the good work. Love the tutorials, very helpful. keep em' coming.
Scott, you and A2A are a true treasure to us hardcore flight simmers. It would help me a lot if you could do a video explaining the best way to adjust your speed, for instance say we needed to slow down and maintain maneuvering speed if we are at high speed cruise and are entering into rough weather, for example.
These tutorials have been great and really show us the level of simulation built into our A2A Comanches. Thanx again A2A and thanx for setting the bar so high! We the community really appreciate the effort and love your product. Cheers! P.S. The A2A Comanche has hands down become my favorite aircraft in MSFS.
Well that taught me. I would have leaned the mix off, like I always do to get the pistons in the green, I didn't realise that would raise the temps. Thank you for your amazing plane and fascinating tutorials.
Yeah, if you lean down the mixture, that means you're making more air and less fuel, Avgas is cold and helps cooling the engine, once you deplets fuel, temperatures go up, obviously it's not just as simple as that, too much fuel will deposit too much lead on the spark plugs, more fuel than optimal will also negatively affect engine performance, so you gotta manage all these factors together, I don't own this A2A software (hopefully will soon) I'm talking from a low time real life pilot's perspective but since A2A seems to be as real as it gets, I think all of this applies to this amazing software of an aircraft!
@@noneofyourbusiness5074 Yes, it does simulate oil build up on the spark plugs, water in the fuel tank, flooding on startup, all the things my Ford Cortina used to do. I highly recommend buying it, you will not regret it, for the first time I feel like I own a plane! It's that real!!! 👍🫶
I am having problems logging back into the a2a forum, no idea why, but I was one of the users who received security error messages during 1.1 and 1.2 updates, thankfully the people at a2a updated the new version to the downloads for 1.1 and 1.2 after receiving lots of forum complaints. Just want to thank them for practively making a new 1.3 full package install for people like me who have this particular problem! Software development is a thankless task but I just wanted to thank the team for making 1.3 available for me too!
Hello there, yes I really enjoy all those tutorials and couldn't imagine they would teach me that much. As I previously said this airplane is a real treat in the sim and wished so much to fly the real one. Thank you for the devotion and realism you put into it. This addon is worth every penny for sure !! The passion you have is contageous and now I'm hooked. ( i want more ! lol) Thank you again and Bravo !!
I stayed away from Accu-Sim after feeling like I was ripped off from buying the Comanche for FSX (back in the day) and then being asked to pay full price again for another update. I finally brought this version for MSFS and man I am glad I did it is superb. Please don't kill me again with a full price upgrade when the sim moves to 2024.
Your A2A Comanche is just amazing....and then i found your tutorials! they are just as amazing as your aircraft! You are really doing everything right! Love it!
i really like your videos, they are all great, thank you for the tutorials, i enjoy flying the comanche in msfs and with your tutorials i slowly start to know what i am doing, thats terrific
thanks a lot for such deep infos on how to operate the plane. thats exactly what i wanted to have. a simulation of the real thing with all its tricky situations and how to handle them. more of this please :) ibtw: found a plastic bag yesterday on the walkaround sticking inside the front of the engine :) walk arounds are important !!!
Cowl Flaps do a lot to aid in engine cooling. Unfortunately, the Commanche does not have cowl flaps. So close attention to cylinder head temps is needed on a hot day in West Texas. There are some after-market baffle kits that help direct more air to the cylinders.
I want to get the slipper to see if it does what it claims, which is lowering drag and increase engine cooling. I have my doubts but theoretically it should work and LoPresti is no novice in this field
Looks like you're still getting 700-800 fpm even at the higher airspeed. That's better than any C152 I ever flew on a hot day! I very much appreciate your insights into changing the climb parameters to do what's overall best for the engine and flight profile. Thinking back when I was learning to fly, I somehow got the idea that you absolutely must always use the exact speeds in the POH come hell or high water. Once I even climbed it out with the oil temp within one needle-width of red, which in hindsight is a little frightening.
Great job, again! Can’t wait for the descent management tutorial, which im assuming is coming up soon (appears you’re going in order which makes sense). I can get myself down, but I am certain I have plenty to learn.
Beautiful stuff, Thank you Captain Scott for these instructional videos, It provides us with extra techniques to take care of this awesome bird while flying it.
Thank you Scott for yet another great video on this amazingly designed Accusim Comanche. You have given us the walk around, the startup, the taxi, the climb and the cruise. How about one on the techniques of the landing (trim, airspeed, etc.)?
Do you have any idea of how much impact you guys have on teaching pilots? I'm a low time Private Pilot and learned way more with your software rather than on my Private Pilot theory studies, A2A is awesome, I can't describe how much I love you guys!!!
Im realy in love with this plane. I think it is one of the best GA plane for Msfs. I only miss navigraph on the tablet. Like the real thing u know ? How many pilots use tablets for charts irl. Just like this Videos. I realy enjoy the parts in the real pa24
Does the generation today realize what an amazing learning tool home sims are these days? I learned to fly in the mid 80's with none of these tools. We just read about this then into the real plane and try to remember everything while learning to fly. And imho your Accu-Sim Comanche 250 is incredible!
Aircraft with this kind of simulation should be closer to the industry standard. Reminds me of Thranda's DHC 2 for X plane 11. AT Simulations are working on a Saab Safir but I know it won't be as good as this. As I fly a Saab Safir myself seeing one in A2A's fidelity would be a feverdream
We must also remember that Vy decreases with higher density altitude and Vx increases with higher density altitude to get book performance. Not sure if MSFS models this. Also MANY pilots are not aware or have been taught improperly that over square is not good or allowed, and do not think to implement the RPM solution for cooling... I like to explain to them that fixed pitch engines spend the vast majority of their lives over square. :)
Scott killing it again with the videos! I like how you guys even simulated the inaccuracies of the probes. Was reading somewhere that since on the Comanche, the factory CHT probe is in the top probe port for cylinder 5, that the JPI probe has to be installed to the plug, which gives different readings than the other 5 cyls. That's cool that it appears to do the same in sim where it seems to always show #5 significantly different than #6. The probe depth on #5 is different from my understanding. *Edit: One thing that confuses me is that you say you sometimes climb out as low as 1900 RPM. Wouldn't that over-torque the prop shaft by doing that? I know really large engines (large P&W radials) this is a real concern since the reason the engine is at a lower RPM is because the prop is placing a ridiculous amount of force in the engine by having more bite into the air. Is this not a concern on the Lycoming O-540?
You can apply up to 25" of manifold pressure at 1900RPM without over torquing on the Lycoming O-540. This is straight from the Lycoming engineering power charts. Higher manifold pressure / lower RPM = higher efficiency
Dear A2A, I absolutely love this aircraft like your others and can't wait to try her in 2024, but please, please build for us Bob Deford's beautiful Spitfire N194OK ❤
It's likely a side-effect of flying aircraft with high-powered engines such as the DC-6 or 377, but is there any significant risk from high torque levels when running high MP/throttle settings and reducing the RPM so much? I would have never considered that approach; only backing off full throttle (at lower altitudes) or winding the RPM back just a little from the red line. Every day is a school day! Thanks for the video as always :)
As long as you stay within the Lycoming power chart guidelines you are good. For example, you can run up to 25" ( a bit more) at 1900RPM on a Lycoming O-540.
Yes, very little though until you get up into higher altitudes. Leaning is a steeper power drop off. Leaning just dramatically increases CHT so when in a hot climb I won't think of leaning until I'm seeing about 350-360 CHT. At these temps it just takes a small bit of leaning to push those temps right through 380 or 400.
Thank you so much again Scott for yet another tutorial. Looking forward to more. 😃👍👍 A small issue I noticed/bug, is when I go from drone to cockpit camera, the parking brake disengages. Maybe this is an already known issue? I don’t know. Anyways, … stay safe, cheers. 😉 Mark
A2A Simulations what is the possibility of adding some effect of exhausting the gases at the exit of the exhaust pipe? Some smoke would also be perfect when starting the engines or shutting them down, I can't say if that would be realistic during such procedures 🙂🙏. A2A team congratulations for the work👏
Hello Scott, I greatly admire your work on this aircraft. I have a question and a challenge that I hope you'll consider. Recently, I attempted an inverted flight with the Comanche. I understand that this is not a standard procedure nor a permitted condition for this aircraft. Nevertheless, I observed an interesting phenomenon with the engine. While the oil pressure did decrease, the oil temperature remained unaffected. Surprisingly, the engine continued to run smoothly, contrary to expectations of potential oil starvation. I recall that your C182 simulation on P3D simulated this behavior. Is there a chance we might see this feature incorporated into the Comanche simulation in the future?
Are you going to make a Cessna 172 for FS2020? It's just I really love flying your aircraft because it's very advanced and the A2A Cessna made me love General Aviation more. Oh well. I'm still gonna get the Comanche.
In Mountain flying when you crest a peak and have to loose a lot of altitude to get down to the airport elevation what is the recommended procedure in the Comanche?
That's a pretty general question, but you can always drop your gear, power to idle, prop pitch full forward to get down fast. If you need to get down even faster, slip the airplane (opposite rudder / aileron).
You can see and hear the passion in this man. That's why his company makes the best
Is he from the company?
@@alexanderfiebrandt6732 Scott _owns_ A2A lol
He not only owns the company but the Comanche 250 that is modeled is the one that A2A/Scott owns in the real world. The simulated version is as close to the real thing as you can probably get without full motion and vr.@@alexanderfiebrandt6732
Passion indeed. Thank you A2A, you legends.
..
This aircraft has blown my mind. It's not overly complicated but the attention to detail in every aspect makes it a constant joy to pilot. Thankyou for your outstanding work.
Scott, thank you so much for everything you, and your team, do for our flightsimulation genre. It is truly appreciated sir. These informative videos are absolutely incredible.
I love these videos, they also feel very personal and not just some marketing to make money. I love this plane and hope to see many more from you guys. Truly a BIG and well deserved thank you to all who worked on this project.
Love the tutorials, thank you!
I discovered the Comanche a couple of days ago from a UA-camr called Huddison. I purchased it right after watching the video and did a couple of patterns with touch and go. An amazing machine and now I'm watching these videos that make the experience even better. Will I be flying anything else from now on? I don't know. Thank you for the products and the videos...not to forget the manual.
I just need an audiobook with Scott just jabbering on about whatever. A Golden Voice.
These tutorials together with your advanced plane is insane. Flying anything else is impossible now 😂 appreciate you and the teams work.
Coming back to MSFS after 20 years… what a welcome. This plane takes the game and elevates it beyond the sum of its parts - bravo. I really appreciate these videos too, brings personality to the experience.
We realy Enjoy flying this Comanche
Scott, you have a gift for teaching. Your passion for aviation makes it way to each and every video you produce. Great work.
A2A might want to consider producing ground school courses for real-world pilots in training!
More than one year with the Comanche, my first A2A plane, and I'm watching this just for fun. Thanks to flying and learning the Comanche, from videos like this one and the A2A forums, I, a non-pilot, have learned a lot about operating real aircraft. I have to say that buying the Comanche has transformed my simming experience and taken it to another level. I can't wait for the Aerostar!
I love this aircraft. On my worldtour, because of critical icing over greenland, i had to land nearly without sight of ground, only the last 2 seconds, but my comanche didn't left me, we landed safely on the glacier. The icing effect in flightmodel and visual is stunning.
Engine management is taught in all flight schools but understanding the depths of why it’s important isn’t something you hear about from most FI’s.
If you wanna know about proper engine management go speak to the aircraft techs. They are a wealth of knowledge for any student / new / old pilot.
I learned more in an hour speaking to the techs than I did in any ground school.
the rod machado of msfs.... thank you so much Sir for these videos
Finally! Real flight simulation starts with A2A!
These tutorials are going to invaluable to me as I make my first steps in learning about flying this marvel of engineering. Scott, you and your team deserve every accolade going !
Scott you’re a absolute star. Just had my first real flight in your Comanche and wish I’d watch this before hand. One cylinder got a bit hot for a few minutes. Best simulation ever. Thanks.
As someone who literally never touches GA and sticks to the tubes, this plane is making me truly adore the GA world. Loving these vids as for someone new to GA, it's amazing
Imo this is the only aircraft in MSFS that actually feels like it’s flying and not just a digital representation. Amazing work A2A you truly achieved something incredible with this aircraft.
Absolutely love flying the comanche. Takes me back to learning to fly. ❤
The Comanche is a masterpiece !! Keep on teaching!!!
What a beautiful aircraft she is. Keep up the good work!
o yeaaa..!!! the best company in the world. love your voice in the tutorial
Amazing work from you and your team, Scott! My new favorite aircraft and I own A LOT. Sorry Miss Mooney, you are no longer head of the pack. haha
Great video, looking forward to a detailed descent, and landing tutorial. Thanks!
A2A " You are the dream we are looking for in the world of the aviation industry.. Previously, now and in the future.. We demand more of the magic that you create for us..
Great tutorial! I also have a personal limit of 400 degrees on those cylinders. Before seeing this video I’d just increase my speed and keep the mixture as rich as possible….It’s an interesting thing to manage because in the heat you also have to lean to make best power, but I’d sacrifice some power for lower temps! :)
Just the best module for MSFS 2020..... i just love this.
Fantastic! Airline pilot looking back at doing light GA again and even a Comanche. These videos are an absolute power find!
Also, the quality of the Sim gives some confidence that I can remember GA again. Thanks loads guys.
This aircraft is unbelievable! The experience of seeing the engine suddenly stop right after takeoff, out of nowhere, left me astonished! Congratulations to A2A for the incredible work! And let's get to studying!
Such a great product and company. I purchased the Comanche for FSX several years ago.
As a non rl pilot. Fairly new to flight sim and very new to the commanche ...
I found these videos so interesting and wish for more in depth videos about the plane. Thankyou!
another excellent video! waiting for the landings!
I live the A2A Comanche and appreciate these videos youve put together showing how best to fly them!
Nice that there are finally more videos from A2A to watch!
Absolutely great video. really enjoying these as much as i enjoy flying Comanche,
This dude needs to become an audiobook narrator STAT.
Scott, supurb. I love this aircraft. Please keep the tutorials coming, not being a PPL I really learned from this one. I was wondering why I destroyed two cylinders already.
Much appreciated. The Comanche 250 is my favourite GA aircraft in MSFS. I need to look after it !. The realism is amazing. Keep up the good work. Love the tutorials, very helpful. keep em' coming.
I really enjoy these tutorials and a plane itself. Thank you! I did my longest sim flight on Comanche, full tanks to almost safe minimums.
Thanks Scott 👍
Scott, you and A2A are a true treasure to us hardcore flight simmers. It would help me a lot if you could do a video explaining the best way to adjust your speed, for instance say we needed to slow down and maintain maneuvering speed if we are at high speed cruise and are entering into rough weather, for example.
Cut power, nose up.
These tutorials have been great and really show us the level of simulation built into our A2A Comanches. Thanx again A2A and thanx for setting the bar so high! We the community really appreciate the effort and love your product. Cheers!
P.S. The A2A Comanche has hands down become my favorite aircraft in MSFS.
Great video. Keep them coming. The Comanche 250 is, without a doubt, my favorite GA plane in MSFS 2020.
Well that taught me. I would have leaned the mix off, like I always do to get the pistons in the green, I didn't realise that would raise the temps. Thank you for your amazing plane and fascinating tutorials.
Yeah, if you lean down the mixture, that means you're making more air and less fuel, Avgas is cold and helps cooling the engine, once you deplets fuel, temperatures go up, obviously it's not just as simple as that, too much fuel will deposit too much lead on the spark plugs, more fuel than optimal will also negatively affect engine performance, so you gotta manage all these factors together, I don't own this A2A software (hopefully will soon) I'm talking from a low time real life pilot's perspective but since A2A seems to be as real as it gets, I think all of this applies to this amazing software of an aircraft!
@@noneofyourbusiness5074 Yes, it does simulate oil build up on the spark plugs, water in the fuel tank, flooding on startup, all the things my Ford Cortina used to do. I highly recommend buying it, you will not regret it, for the first time I feel like I own a plane! It's that real!!! 👍🫶
I am having problems logging back into the a2a forum, no idea why, but I was one of the users who received security error messages during 1.1 and 1.2 updates, thankfully the people at a2a updated the new version to the downloads for 1.1 and 1.2 after receiving lots of forum complaints. Just want to thank them for practively making a new 1.3 full package install for people like me who have this particular problem! Software development is a thankless task but I just wanted to thank the team for making 1.3 available for me too!
Are you sure your password is correct?
Hello there, yes I really enjoy all those tutorials and couldn't imagine they would teach me that much. As I previously said this airplane is a real treat in the sim and wished so much to fly the real one. Thank you for the devotion and realism you put into it. This addon is worth every penny for sure !! The passion you have is contageous and now I'm hooked. ( i want more ! lol)
Thank you again and Bravo !!
Thanks for this tutorial! A2A
I can't get enough of these videos. I enjoy them almost as much as flying the Comanche. What a great aircraft!
Thanks, great info, keep them coming!
Just - unexpectedly - learned a couple of things for RL flying, great video series 👍
Fantastic tutorial for real world flying too. Eye opening!
Thanks a bunch for sharing the climb tips! Your Comanche rocks! 💪
I've got a week off work and I'm just downloading my Commanche right now :)
Cant wait!
Thanks Scott, really love these explaining videos. The Comanche is by far my favorite aircraft in the sim now.
Thanks for all of these informative videos and another great A2A product.
I stayed away from Accu-Sim after feeling like I was ripped off from buying the Comanche for FSX (back in the day) and then being asked to pay full price again for another update. I finally brought this version for MSFS and man I am glad I did it is superb. Please don't kill me again with a full price upgrade when the sim moves to 2024.
Informative as always, details you just don't find on other channels. Thx for sharing your experience and info
Your A2A Comanche is just amazing....and then i found your tutorials! they are just as amazing as your aircraft! You are really doing everything right! Love it!
Brilliant series, love this aircraft
i really like your videos, they are all great, thank you for the tutorials, i enjoy flying the comanche in msfs and with your tutorials i slowly start to know what i am doing, thats terrific
thanks a lot for such deep infos on how to operate the plane. thats exactly what i wanted to have. a simulation of the real thing with all its tricky situations and how to handle them. more of this please :) ibtw: found a plastic bag yesterday on the walkaround sticking inside the front of the engine :) walk arounds are important !!!
No other plane teaches you to fly within the ever changing sim environment like this one does.
l’m going mad flying the Comanche (or learning to)) since a week or so and l am loving it!!! ❤
Thank you for these excellent tutorials. Looking forward to more!
Awesome... Love this series and hoping for more ! 😊😀
Im looking forward to getting this next week and applying what im learning in the videos, thanks so much for bringing it to xbox
Great video, great plane. Now I'm hoping you do a B-17 for MSFS some day!
The production quality of your videos is much appreciated. Sure made me buy one.
I love these videos
Cowl Flaps do a lot to aid in engine cooling. Unfortunately, the Commanche does not have cowl flaps. So close attention to cylinder head temps is needed on a hot day in West Texas. There are some after-market baffle kits that help direct more air to the cylinders.
I want to get the slipper to see if it does what it claims, which is lowering drag and increase engine cooling. I have my doubts but theoretically it should work and LoPresti is no novice in this field
Looks like you're still getting 700-800 fpm even at the higher airspeed. That's better than any C152 I ever flew on a hot day! I very much appreciate your insights into changing the climb parameters to do what's overall best for the engine and flight profile. Thinking back when I was learning to fly, I somehow got the idea that you absolutely must always use the exact speeds in the POH come hell or high water. Once I even climbed it out with the oil temp within one needle-width of red, which in hindsight is a little frightening.
Great job, again! Can’t wait for the descent management tutorial, which im assuming is coming up soon (appears you’re going in order which makes sense). I can get myself down, but I am certain I have plenty to learn.
Awesome videos !
Beautiful stuff, Thank you Captain Scott for these instructional videos, It provides us with extra techniques to take care of this awesome bird while flying it.
Thank you Scott for yet another great video on this amazingly designed Accusim Comanche.
You have given us the walk around, the startup, the taxi, the climb and the cruise. How about one on the techniques of the landing (trim, airspeed, etc.)?
They are coming. It will take a while as it's a big subject.
This is the only plane that made me not uninstall MSFS yet ;-)
Very useful, thank you!
Do you have any idea of how much impact you guys have on teaching pilots? I'm a low time Private Pilot and learned way more with your software rather than on my Private Pilot theory studies, A2A is awesome, I can't describe how much I love you guys!!!
Im realy in love with this plane. I think it is one of the best GA plane for Msfs. I only miss navigraph on the tablet. Like the real thing u know ? How many pilots use tablets for charts irl.
Just like this Videos. I realy enjoy the parts in the real pa24
Does the generation today realize what an amazing learning tool home sims are these days?
I learned to fly in the mid 80's with none of these tools. We just read about this then into the real plane and try to remember everything while learning to fly.
And imho your Accu-Sim Comanche 250 is incredible!
Aircraft with this kind of simulation should be closer to the industry standard. Reminds me of Thranda's DHC 2 for X plane 11. AT Simulations are working on a Saab Safir but I know it won't be as good as this. As I fly a Saab Safir myself seeing one in A2A's fidelity would be a feverdream
We must also remember that Vy decreases with higher density altitude and Vx increases with higher density altitude to get book performance. Not sure if MSFS models this.
Also MANY pilots are not aware or have been taught improperly that over square is not good or allowed, and do not think to implement the RPM solution for cooling... I like to explain to them that fixed pitch engines spend the vast majority of their lives over square. :)
Accu-Sim physics naturally model Vy changes with altitude, yes.
@@ShockwaveProd awesome!
Thanks for this tutorial!
Would be nice if A2A would also develop a Piper PA28 Archer III or Cessna 172S!!!! :-)
thank you
Scott killing it again with the videos! I like how you guys even simulated the inaccuracies of the probes. Was reading somewhere that since on the Comanche, the factory CHT probe is in the top probe port for cylinder 5, that the JPI probe has to be installed to the plug, which gives different readings than the other 5 cyls. That's cool that it appears to do the same in sim where it seems to always show #5 significantly different than #6. The probe depth on #5 is different from my understanding.
*Edit: One thing that confuses me is that you say you sometimes climb out as low as 1900 RPM. Wouldn't that over-torque the prop shaft by doing that? I know really large engines (large P&W radials) this is a real concern since the reason the engine is at a lower RPM is because the prop is placing a ridiculous amount of force in the engine by having more bite into the air. Is this not a concern on the Lycoming O-540?
You can apply up to 25" of manifold pressure at 1900RPM without over torquing on the Lycoming O-540. This is straight from the Lycoming engineering power charts. Higher manifold pressure / lower RPM = higher efficiency
I do enjoy the tutorials. Thank you. Maybe a tutorial about the JPI would benifit us.
Our cruise tutorial shows how to use it for leaning
Thank you, I will review that video.@@ShockwaveProd
Dear A2A, I absolutely love this aircraft like your others and can't wait to try her in 2024, but please, please build for us Bob Deford's beautiful Spitfire N194OK ❤
It's likely a side-effect of flying aircraft with high-powered engines such as the DC-6 or 377, but is there any significant risk from high torque levels when running high MP/throttle settings and reducing the RPM so much? I would have never considered that approach; only backing off full throttle (at lower altitudes) or winding the RPM back just a little from the red line. Every day is a school day! Thanks for the video as always :)
As long as you stay within the Lycoming power chart guidelines you are good. For example, you can run up to 25" ( a bit more) at 1900RPM on a Lycoming O-540.
Rich mixture will reduce power somewhat. Worth the tradeoff, I guess.
Yes, very little though until you get up into higher altitudes. Leaning is a steeper power drop off. Leaning just dramatically increases CHT so when in a hot climb I won't think of leaning until I'm seeing about 350-360 CHT. At these temps it just takes a small bit of leaning to push those temps right through 380 or 400.
Thank you so much again Scott for yet another tutorial. Looking forward to more. 😃👍👍
A small issue I noticed/bug, is when I go from drone to cockpit camera, the parking brake disengages.
Maybe this is an already known issue? I don’t know.
Anyways, … stay safe, cheers. 😉
Mark
Thanks for the report on the parking brake, we will check this
Great video ! How come one cylinder can overheat, and not all ? Are they not all doing the same work ?
A2A Simulations what is the possibility of adding some effect of exhausting the gases at the exit of the exhaust pipe? Some smoke would also be perfect when starting the engines or shutting them down, I can't say if that would be realistic during such procedures 🙂🙏. A2A team congratulations for the work👏
It's on the list to do at some point
Also, the Vy in this aircraft is equal to DMMS(Defined Minimum Maneuvering Speed), like it should be
Hello Scott, I greatly admire your work on this aircraft. I have a question and a challenge that I hope you'll consider. Recently, I attempted an inverted flight with the Comanche. I understand that this is not a standard procedure nor a permitted condition for this aircraft. Nevertheless, I observed an interesting phenomenon with the engine.
While the oil pressure did decrease, the oil temperature remained unaffected. Surprisingly, the engine continued to run smoothly, contrary to expectations of potential oil starvation. I recall that your C182 simulation on P3D simulated this behavior. Is there a chance we might see this feature incorporated into the Comanche simulation in the future?
Is there seriously *only* the Comanche out so far? I'd scoop up everything they produced! :D
Are you going to make a Cessna 172 for FS2020? It's just I really love flying your aircraft because it's very advanced and the A2A Cessna made me love General Aviation more. Oh well. I'm still gonna get the Comanche.
In Mountain flying when you crest a peak and have to loose a lot of altitude to get down to the airport elevation what is the recommended procedure in the Comanche?
That's a pretty general question, but you can always drop your gear, power to idle, prop pitch full forward to get down fast. If you need to get down even faster, slip the airplane (opposite rudder / aileron).
Question, will you have to rework anything in order to get the Comanche flying in MSFS 2024 or will it be ready to go day one?