And I feel I just learned something...Thanks
I've been at 10,000 foot DA departures at KTVL in a Deb and a Turbo Arrow where the engine wouldn't even idle at full rich. In the Debonair, the fuel flow gauge has a setting in thousands of feet where you start lean, go full throttle, and enrichen to the altitude corresponding with the needle, which approximately gives you best power. In the TA, you advance the throttle and the mixture to full simultaneously, and by the time the engine and the turbocharger spools up you are good to go. And there are other methods of determining and achieving best power as well.
But you do have to be mindful as well on long decents to pay attention to mixture. The penalty to pay is that you end up too lean. That stung me one time, I was flying my Arrow II on a hot day, and I descended from 7,500, and around 3,000 feet, I started losing power. I pointed my airplane for the best field immediately (Watts Woodland airport, doable if I had a failure) and went through the checklist. And it was indeed mixture. I normally run LOP, and my engine runs fine LOP with no noticeable roughness. I pushed the mixture forward, not full, but forward, and there I was developing full power again. Whew.
That said, an overly lean condition is usually easier to recover from than an overly rich. Your engine usually doesn't suddenly quit from being too lean, it just doesn't make enough power. If it quits from being too rich, you both have a flooded engine condition, and probably fouled plugs as well to recover from. It takes more time. Sometimes too much time.