Really? How does setting the throttle higher increase compression?By setting the throttle to a faster position the engine's compression is set higher creating more pressure and heat..
Hmmm.... First of all, "air-fuel mixture" is a gas-engine term: in a diesel, the AIR is compressed, then diesel is injected, supposedly almost instantaneously vapourized, and burns. Now, in a starting engine I'm guessing the problem is the fuel isn't vapourizing before burning, creating the blue or black smoke. (Anyone who's started a Dickenson diesel stove would know what I mean!). Now, assuming the injection normally starts before TDC, delaying it would mean it would be injected closer to TDC so the air would be more compressed before the fuel enters, which I guess would mean it's more likely to be vapourized before it starts burning.According to the service manual's cold start procedure "When the control lever is set to the HIGH SPEED position, injection timing is automatically delayed to facilitate starting." This allows the air/fuel mixture to become more compressed and create more heat before ignition. Not an engineer here, just thinking it through.