A lot of sources give a Vmca (minimum control speed - air) for the Mosquito of 180 knots. As it takes off around 130 knots there's a significant gap during which, if an engine fails, the aircraft does not have enough rudder authority to keep going straight. So you either start rolling until you hit the ground (not the preferred outcome but at this point the aircraft is flying you, not the other way around) or you throttle back the other (good) engine and aim for a flat piece of land. If you're lucky and react quickly enough (remember that you also have to feather and shut down the failed engine) you might be able to hold enough power against maximum rudder to stay in the air, but this is also dependant on the altitude and airspeed you've got available, density altitude, temperature, weight of the aircraft and the influence of your preferred deity.
DaveB wrote:That routine for the Seminole must be pretty much the same for any multi engined aircraft without prop sync. It's the way I fly all of ours on the VA anyway

You're right, a lot of light twins use similar engine/prop combinations and it is simply the aerodynamics of the props which dictate 'normal' RPMs. The Beechcraft Baron uses the same RPMs but the Piper Seneca is slightly different, using 2450 RPM for cruise if my memory is correct, I've only flown that type once so the numbers aren't as familiar as for the others.
speedbird591 wrote:I had a feeling that he only just cleared the threshold on landing which was surprising considering the length of the runway.
One of the three must useless things in aviation: runway behind you...
