PE?
Huskymeister?!!
Tell me where I need to go and I'll go....
I did find this on Carburettor Icing... so I am confident this is the issue:-
"When an older car with carburettors splutters to a halt on the motorway, as you write in your Book of Motoring Answers, all too often the problem is carburettor icing. The trouble is, in the short time it takes to call out a rescue service, residual heat in the engine usually melts the ice, removing the airflow obstruction, and the car runs perfectly again.
The symptoms are always the same: the engine suffers a loss of power, the fuel needle races towards empty and, usually within a few miles, one is forced to pull over. The expansion of air after being drawn through the restriction of the venturi, combined with the chill of cold fast-moving air, cools the carburettor sufficiently to ice the fuel, which then gradually closes the intake to air and sucks more fuel to equalise the manifold depression.
Almost all cars have a system which takes hot air from around the exhaust manifold and feeds it into the air intake in cold weather. The hot air feeds through a flexible tube (basically cardboard covered in silver foil) which disintegrates over time, until it falls off altogether. If you are having carburettor icing problems, almost certainly it is because this tube is damaged or missing. If the tube is in place, the problem is probably with the mechanism that controls the flow of hot air according to air temperature. Check the pipework to this mechanism (which is mounted somewhere on the air filter housing). If the pipework is OK, the vacuum operated flap which regulates the air filter is faulty. Replace the complete air filter housing with one from a scrap car."
This describes my issue perfectly. Especially why the petrol gets used.