by IndioBlack » Wed Jan 05, 2005 4:59 am
Okay I've just tried this with a B-26 in a campaign mission. I took off and then warped to the next waypoint. On arrival, my engines appeared to be very quiet , even though the props were spinning, and I was losing speed.
I realised that in warping, I had reached an altitude of 14,000ft. This meant that the mixture setting, which had not changed since take-off, was too rich, and the engines were gasping for lack of air. I retarded the mixture levers to lean mixture and the engines coughed into noisy life again.
This confirms exactly what smoke2much was saying.
I assume that having automixture enabled would solve the problem, but since I'm flying with manual mixture, I just have to be prepared to re-set the mixture controls when I come out of warp.
If I'd bothered to climb to altitude before warping, I would have noticed the need for lean mixture coming on gradually, and would have already leaned it out before warping. Obviously, warping to the same altitude will not cause problems for the engine.