Robbins
Team WTFO (Watch The Fun Occur)
1.
Pressure differential across venturi will remain the same.
2.
Pressure available to push fuel through the needles is also reduced proportionally to the pressure (hence your column of air). However, if we assume flow of a liquid through an orifice, that is on the square root of the pressure change. Therefore there continues to be an increase (more fuel to air) in stoichiometric ratio, though much smaller.
3.
Another issue to consider - a portion of the fuel added is used for cooling. Going to higher altitude (less power) produces less heat. Thereby the small component of fuel used for cooling (a portion of which is not needed) adds to the "richness" experienced. Could one compensate for this by achieving better cooling to reduce the need to use excess fuel for cooling?
1: I agree, as it is dependent on only engine rpm
2: I agree under technicality. The fuel is pulled at the mixture needles by the negative pressure in the Venturi. The only push is the force delivered by power/transfer stroke applied to case side of diaphragm. Of course one could technically say that the needle spring pushes the diaphragm back to accept the next pulse, but atmospheric influence here is quite negligible.
3: I'm a little lost with you on this one. I do not disagree, however, I say a properly tuned engine will utilize oil, not gasoline to keep temps in check. Of course a sloppy rich engine will run cooler.
As far as your last statement... Of course! Enter baffling and water cooling
what engines do you commonly run between those locations, TazHi guys
I'm flying here in Israel from about -1200' to +3000' and you can feel that there is a different...
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