Be nice Hauschild, it doesn't cost any more.
German Fuels
A3-80 Octane
B4-87 Octane
C3-100 Octane
Due to a shortage of C3, DB went to concave pistons to lower the compression so it's engine could run on the lower octane numbers. This limited preignition & detonation within the cylinders on the compression stroke. Even our higher output engines of today with computer controlled timing & fuel mix don't do well on our 87 low grade fuels. I'm not talking about plain jane engines, which most are, but the higher output ones. Because of their higher compression ratios, they smoke & make noises under heavy acceleration. That's why I believed in what I've read about the DBs doing the same thing. The first time I read about this smoke was in James F. Craig's book, The Messerschmitt BF 109. I think he called it a 'sooty black exhaust'. Since then I've read it quit a few times & with my auto repair experience, I did & still believe it.
The bottom line is, overly rich running internal combustion engines give off black smoke. The computers on the vehicles of today, making auto adjustment, stop most of the noise & smoke. In the engines of old, under heavy acceleration, went rich & smoked. With carbs one rplaces jets for mixture whilst with injection, it's an adjutment. Jet or adjust for leaner or richer, altitude being a factor. An air/fuel mixture @ sealevel would not be suficient @ a higher altitude. A clean burn @ the lower would be a richer burn @ the higher. That's why the carb ones would keep adjusting their mixtures for inches of mercury so a more efficent burn would take place. I don't know wether the injection DBs had this abilty. Methinks it was adjusted on the ground, for whatever job was in store, ground attack or bomber busting etc.
Anyways, I've gone long enough. I've found that trying to change attitudes is hopless & it quickly goes into a who's right or wrong rather than what's right or wrong.
Thanks for all the input!
FWIW,
Good Hunting!
Edited by Kraut (10/26/09 09:09 AM)