Hello all, Been trying to earn 2 paychecks and finish the plane so slow to respond on the net. First: carb icing typically does not occur above 70 degree F temps, and high humidity days. If you have carb icing look at both the humidity for the day AND the temp at altitude. Someone already explained it technically, but in simple terms the gas introduced into the carb venturi, coupled with the temp drop associated with the velocity increase in the venturi together produce the ice which builds up and stops flow of fuel. The engine heat is not enough to melt this ice, which is the reason that exhaust mounted "cups" are used to apply heat to the carb venturi when icing is experienced. The early V8 engines did NOT use heat riser tubes off the exhaust to prevent carb icing, but rather had them for assisting the engine in warming up, by causing the incoming air to the carb to be drawn off of the rapidly warming exhaust to warm the air/fuel mixture to prevent separation when the mix struck the cold intake manifold. Gradually the engine heat, through water cross over in the intake manifold ends, and exhaust heat cross over under the carb would provide sufficient heating to prevent separation, and the heat riser from the exhaust would be shutoff through the use of a heat controlled vacuum valve. The problem was that early engines were not very good at keeping themselves cool, so thermostat temps were kept low, which allowed for icing, even though the engine was "hot". This inability to properly cool also lead to percolation of the fuel still in the line or vapor locking as we all know it. This happens in almost every certified fuel injection engine, due to hot soak. An easy way to eliminate this is to use an auxiliary fuel pump to insure that liquid fuel fills the line not gas, by running this pump for approximately 10-15 seconds before attempting startup. Then you know that enough fuel mist is being applied, instead of the excessively lean amount during vapor lock. All carb engines should have a certain amount of engine heat applied to the carb for proper atomization of the fuel mixture, or commonly, fuel mixing. So yes Serge apply heat.
Colin & Bev Rainey KR2(td) N96TA Sanford, FL crain...@cfl.rr.com or crbrn9...@hotmail.com http://kr-builder.org/Colin/index.html