We can debate about fuel mileage/consumption but it seems like the big savings for the Germans was when running rich. The German engines never really ran rich, they used only slightly more fuel per HP/hour at full power than they did when cruising. Many allied engines used 40-50% more fuel per hp/hour at high power. In part for cooling and in part to make up for poor fuel distribution (solved by fuel injection). But planes spent a lot more time cruising than they did at high power.
Running really rich was a way to achieve something else, like extra power, not something that people strove to do just because they can
If an engine does not need to be run very rich, even better.
The DB 601E used 240L/h in the cruise mode, 840 HP at 5.1 km. The V-1650-1 - engine with better carb than the float-type the British used until mid-war - used 238.5 L/h (65 US gals/h) in cruise mode, 758 HP at ~5 km (16000 ft). So we have the power surplus of
I'm not sure from where the notion that 'the German injector set-up could not handle the needed fuel flow' comes from.Some FW 190s just dumped raw fuel into the air intakes ahead of the supercharger inlet for emergency power. Extra cooling or trying to get some of the effect the British were getting from the carbs, or both? The German injector set-up could not handle the needed fuel flow. Perhaps a new pump set up with more fuel flow could have been made to work?
Extra fuel dumped on the BMW 801 was a form of an ADI, or indeed the way to over-rich the mixture so the engine can handle the greater boost without detonation. Figuring out that such a way was very fuel-intensive (surprise!) and only working in the low gear, they switched to the simple over-boosting, in the fashion the Merlin III had years before.
You are not the only oneMaybe I haven't got enough sleep![]()
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