RW; Thank you for your thoughts/time.
I am well aware that the air pressure at the carburettor inlet should be the same as in the float bowl (hence the importance of float bowl breather location).
I think I may have seen a comment somewhere, that Rotax carburettors do not like high (RAM) air pressure. I assume this comment included float bowl pressure. I do not recall why this would be the case or what the effect /symptoms would be. My speculating would be, a lean fuel burn with high EGTs, don't know if fuel could be ejected from the float bowl into air box. Power at TO/Climb would not be affected due to relativly low forward speed.
I think low air pressure, at the carburettor intake, may be easier - I would anticipate/guess a rich cool running engine/ low power/black coaked plugs. What I don't know is if there may be a tendency for fuel to be ejected into the air box.
Engine performance observations:
Starts & runs smoothly.
Good TO/Climb/Cruise performance.
Left EGT slightly higher than Right. Same for Cylinder Head (coolant) temperatures.
High rpm/fine pitch, low forward speed (80 knots) can result in a high EGT warning.
!00 hr service/inspection - plugs black & sooted up.
Carburettor pneumatic balance - during 4000-5000 RPM pressure check (dials equal), vacuum greater, compared with previous 912 ULS. Dial/Bourdon gauges - indicator does not go as high, towards atmospheric - subject to imperfect memory.