In a message dated 1/22/2011 11:54:33 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
eanderson@carolina.rr.com writes:
I'm not certain what heating the air would do but
further reduce the air density which would theoretically mean you would need
less fuel to maintain the same air/fuel ratio - so that might reduce the risk
(to a piston engine) of running tool lean - but would still cut down the fuel
consumption by permitting less fuel and yet maintain the same air/fuel
ratio.
The only down side I have notice in flying
WOT (at cruise altitudes) with reduced air/fuel ratio is that the engine
occasionally will miss - not enough to worry about (unless you worry about
things like that {:>), generally just enriched the fuel mixture a bit stops
it.
Having said that - I have never compared operating at
reduced throttle setting to WOT so can't say how much (if any) difference it
makes - theoretically, it should make some difference.
FWIW that's my $0.02
Ed
Everything Ed said, and:
A) Wide open throttle keeps cylinder filling closer to 100% which means
effective compression ratio stays higher, which means that more heat of
compression is available to maintain vaporization which means more of the
available fuel gets burned.
B) Adding heat to the intake air raises heat of compression and improves
vaporization and allows for an even leaner mixture to burn completely.
C) Although detonation is charge temperature dependant, super lean mixtures
produce slower flame front speeds and mimic ultra high octane fuels, so
detonation should not be a factor.
This is not at all damaging to the engine. Less fuel per revolution means
lower temperatures and less stress.
All big radial engines were run well lean of peak EGT. Lest TWA would never
have made it across the Atlantic. Lest the P-38s would never have made the round
trip to kill Yamamoto. Even works on supercharged and turbo charged
engines.
Lynn E. Hanover