I'm using the Cessna Pilot Center ground material. One of the questions is:
I picked 3, and they say I'm wrong. They say it's 2. Their explanation is:
Who is right? Obviously the goal of adjusting the mixture for altitude is to maintain the correct ratio of fuel mass to air mass ('mass' being the usual term for 'weight'). Logically you can't keep something the same by adjusting it so that rules out answer 2.
My understanding is that the carburettor mixes a fixed mass of fuel with a given volume of air, and it's for that reason that you have to adjust the ratio at all. Therefore answer 3 is correct. Or am I missing something?
"When you adjust the fuel/air ratio with the mixture control for a change in altitude, the ratio you are changing is the
"
- volume of fuel to the volume of air
- weight of fuel to the weight of air
- weight of fuel to the volume of air
I picked 3, and they say I'm wrong. They say it's 2. Their explanation is:
"Answers 1 and 3 are incorrect because the number of air molecules in a fixed volume of air changes significantly with changes in altitude and consequently the only valid ratio is by weight."
Who is right? Obviously the goal of adjusting the mixture for altitude is to maintain the correct ratio of fuel mass to air mass ('mass' being the usual term for 'weight'). Logically you can't keep something the same by adjusting it so that rules out answer 2.
My understanding is that the carburettor mixes a fixed mass of fuel with a given volume of air, and it's for that reason that you have to adjust the ratio at all. Therefore answer 3 is correct. Or am I missing something?