concours
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- Dec 29, 2011
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gripper said:I thought engines performed better in cold weather (and damp) because the air is more dense and so dense air carries more fuel with it. (some gas turbine engines use water methanol to do this)
Cold, (thus denser) air has more oxygen molecules per volume, and carburetors mix air/fuel by volume, so the cold air makes it leaner. The "run better" legend is (usually) true because jetting generally has a safety margin built in (richer than optimum) to allow for variations in altitude, temp., usage, thus forfeiting a small degree of power for engine safety. The "runs better" is real & noticeable because, when cold, dense air is at hand, you are now closer to optimum.