I think this is one for the experts.
Driving back home from Cairns last night - it was chilly for a North Queenslander (sub 10 degrees I presume) and the 130 was on song all the 330km home. I noticed a distinct power improvement over the run down in the middle of the day on Saturday (Hot and dry out between lakeland and Molloy). In the cold the 130 was happy sitting at 110kph and even had more to go when at a similar throtte position on saturday where it was only happy doing 100kph.
Anyway I got thinking about how the 300 Injection Pump is set up.
The turbo has essentially a fixed boost pressure at a set RPM.
According to Boyles Gas Law to maintain that pressure the two variables are Volume and Temperature... so as charge inlet temperature goes down (chilly night so airbox temp is down and post intercooler inlet temperature is also down) then the volume of air (O2) has been increased. All makes sense so far.
Now the 300 IP has a boost sensor, so I can understand that changes in inlet pressure are compensated for but there is no volume (MAF / O2) sensor so I can only presume that fuelling is essentially set for a predetermined air charge volume at a certain boost pressure... The volume is related to temperature which means the pump setting is "optimized" for a specific ambient air temperature. Am I on the right track. The optimized temperature assuming it is a UK design would be closer to Sunday night than Saturday lunch maybe???
Is this the reason why my fuel consumption seems to go up when its FNQ hot (talking 13L/100) compared to when its a night run 11L/100. Effectively when its hot the engine is under volumed or conversely over fuelled?
I tried to do the maths while driving; at 2800RPM the 300tdi should need 58L of air per second. Is the little hairdryer capable of pumping that volume when its hot (like 35 ambient 50-60 road temp) at the factory pressure.
Now Im sure Im missing some vital clue, (like a dieso isnt actually anything but an airpump and there is always more air volume than required for the stoichiometric ratio - I want numbers

) but I want to know if Im thinking right?
I also figured the easiest way to rectify this situation (if it is a situation) would be to adjust the boost upwards in high ambient temps.
Any takers?
Steve
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