As for temporarily overspeeding by pushing the lever forward: is that even possible?
Sure is. Depending upon the engine/prop you
can easily zing the RPM over the redline if you
shove the props all the way forward suddenly.
Changing the engine RPM rapidly is very bad
if you have crankshaft counterweights (4 cyl
Lycs do not, 6 cyl Lycs do, as an example),
as they can be damaged.
If the throttle is not advanced slowly, the
Pitts with the Lyc AEIO-540 and the very
light MT props will change RPM (and blow right
past redline RPM) far too rapidly than is good
for the engine because of the lack of rotating
mass of the prop. Polar moment of inertia,
again. The blades are composite and very light,
so there is very little flywheel effect.
As a rule of thumb, I do not push the props
forward until the RPM falls on approach (eg
Maule w/TCM IO-360 and 1500 RPM on base)
That means that the props are already at
the full fine pitch stops, and pushing the
prop levers/knobs in will do nothing.
Every engine/prop combination is different,
and what you can get away with on one,
is death to another.
For example, on the 421, like Chuck, I don't
shove the props forward. They stay at 1800
RPM the entire approach and landing. In the
very unlikely event I have to overshoot, it's
(from right to left) mixtures rich (they are lean
during approach), props forward and throttles
forward.
I realize that TC does not like you to fly that
way, but TCM does, and I think I will listen to
what the engine manufacturer recommends,
and it sure as hell isn't rich mixture and full
fine pitch during the approach, with the engines
zinging madly.
It makes you sound like a real putz, too. Every
senior pilot on the ground winces when you shove
the prop levers forward and bounce off the RPM
redline during approach. It tells them that there
is a real wanker at the controls, who is going to
do damage when he flies a bigger engine.
Pisses the neighbours off, too.
Maybe you don't care about either of the above,
but I do.