As you go up, air is less dense and there are two effects on internal combustion engines. One is that the air/fuel mixture will lean out and the other is that the dynamic compression ratio will change.
Compression ratio is the change in volume from when the piston is at the bottom of the stroke to the top of the stroke has a significant effect on engine power. By adding more and more dome to a piston and changing the static compression ratio, a manufacturer could maintain the same power in say, Denver as they could in Houston. If you take that same "high altitude" engine and move it to Houston, it will make more power than the lower compression engine but it will be more picky about fuel and ignition timing.
Aircraft with piston engines work these problems by a pilot operated mixture control and with turbocharching.
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Today's Featured Article - A City Guy's First Tractor - by Fred Hambrecht. After living in apartments in Atlanta for more years than I care to remember, the wife and I decided to move to the country. Humming "Green Acres is the place for me..." we purchased a 29 acre tract about 60 miles south of Atlanta. Next came the house, I could talk about that ordeal for another two weeks... But, I want to talk about my tractor! We didn't even own a lawnmower, and all of a sudden we had enough grass to feed all the starving children of the bovine world. Naturally, I talked
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