You're suffering from a relative lack of available oxygen per intake stroke. High altitude is where boosted engines excel, since they oversupply oxygen under boost, and thus tend to lose less power at elevation. You could add a turbo or nitrous oxide, but other than that, you're at the mercy of the mountain gods--sorry. On Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 1:52 PM, robby kilborn <robbykilborn@gmail.com>wrote: > Sheri and I are making our way through New Mexico and I've noticed a > significant drop in speed and power in my van at altitude. The same thing > happened to me when I crossed the Rockies in Canada in 2007 and 2008. Is > there something I should do that would provide relieve to this 'guardrail > syndrome'? It happens on inclines, declines and flat lines. Now that > we're > back down to 4000 feet here in Alamogordo (heading west), its all good, but > there are more climbs ahead. > > Also, yesterday while driving up a mountain in Fort Stanton rec area in > Ruidoso, I was revisited by the buzzing alarm and flashing oil light. I > have not seen this since the climb in the Rockies in 2007-2008. The > incline > isn't all that steep, but its consistent... and long. What does it mean? I > have new oil, new filter, good levels... running 10W30... I expect more of > it in the near future as we continue to climb and descend around the US and > Canada. > > > Robby > 1987 Syncro. >
-- Casey |
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