It's also the money lever (or knob). Where I put it can be 15gph, or 11.5...
Honestly, I never take off full rich here either. The field elevation is 2600 or so, but DA is regularly over 5000 or more. On run-up, I set the mixture full rich and RPM to 2000, and as I bring the mixture down, I get the RPM bump more than halfway through the lever's travel. Probably close to 2/3rds. Full rich is definitely not best power, here (and really I find that to be true even when it's not ridiculously hot).
Yeah by the time I strap the airplane on, the money difference between 11.5 and 15 is kinda not worth worrying about much. Ha. Too many years spent flying slow airplanes, I’m over it. LOL.
I’ll never buy a jet, but $20 more bucks an hour to fight the evil damn drag curve and physics, is fine by me. Ha.
Old Cessna POHs say 3000’ for when to start to lean. They don’t specify MSL or DA. That was left up to the pilot and their brain cells in the day of tiny pamphlet sized POH books. Haha.
As long as you’ve made about three half twists in from max power, ok most vernier style mixture controls, just to have some unknown... but clearly workable... margin against detonation, it’ll work out better than dumping massive amounts of fuel through the engine that it can’t even burn.
One caveat to this, if the engine refuses to cool down in climb, I’ll let it have as much fuel as it wants with the red knob all the way forward and the climb shallowed and sped up as much as practicable.
Overheated aluminum just isn’t very strong, and it’s no longer a fun day when the engine quits because of repetitive heat stress or worse, things melting.
At sea level the mighty old O-470 will suck gas through a firehose compared to up here and it’ll get a lot hotter if you shove the nose in the air to impress someone with the climb rate of a fat nosed spamcan that has lots of yummy air to work with, both for the engine and for the lifty things we are hanging under.
I’ll still climb it like a bat out of hell for just a minute or so, down there, just to prove the book isn’t lying about the climb numbers that I never see at home. And oh yeah; to clear obstacles. Right... obstacles. That’s it!
Hahaha. But then ya gotta ease off a bit in hot weather. That fat six cylinder chunk of metal likes airflow.
I feel cheated. I almost never get to use all 230 HP I paid for! Only in winter when I have to freeze my butt off at the hangar.
The answer is always more money though...
Heated, lighted, hangar... mo’ money. Mo’ money.
My short time in twins made me quite thankful for 11-15 GPH in my Skylane. Hahahaha.