Here's a tip that the experts forget to tell the new folks asking for this type of advice:
The setting on the ground with a tach will vary a significant amount due to the type of tank you're running, where it's mounted, venturi size, altitude density. etc.
If you're running a center mounted tank (full fuse), a conventional metal tank mounted outboard side, a narrow clunk tank, or a clunk tank on the inboard side; the ground setting can vary a huge amount to achieve the same in-flight setting. It will also vary with muffler pressure, uniflo, or old school stunt venting.
So......on the first flight I recommend: with the prop you've selected, set the needle on the ground in a fast 4 cycle and fly the airplane. pay close attention to what it does in the air I.E. stays rich, leans out a little, leans out alot, etc. On susequent flights, adjust the needle (in small increments) to achieve the type of run you are looking for I.E. 4-2-4, all 4, wet 2, etc. When you get to that point, fly it again, don't touch the needle, and this time get a tach reading on the ground and record it. Now you have a useful number for that prop, fuel, airplane , engine combo. If you change the prop or the fuel or travel to a flying site at a significantly different altitude, you will need to go through the process again to determine the optimum ground RPM
There are just too many variables to count on using someone else's tach reading as a starting point for your set-up. As you can see from Brett's experience above with seemingly identicle set-ups, one engine reads vastly different than the other. Trying to get to the higher RPM figure with the slower engine would result in a very lean run. Starting out rich on the ground at first may waste a flight flying level but it won't damage your engine
