Likewise there are days that are warm enough not to ever have the miss, and there are days that are cold enough to miss even when the engine's warm. BTDT, came up with a fix for it, wrote a post on it, and somehow still reliving it.
I suppose that's the difference between us - you have, as you put it:
Personally, my nature is to not simply accept the "easy fix" just because it seems to work, but rather, try to understand the real underlying cause, and if possible or practical, try to treat THAT instead of its resulting symptom.
Please don't take this as a "dig" - it's
not, only a comment meant to explain my own curiosity on a issue or "fix" you and a few others have already accepted as adequate.
Your theory apparently is that the entire root cause of the problem relates to the position of the camshaft or it's tone ring in relation to the sensor pickup - you may be absolutely correct - I'm not so sure.
Bear with my memory here, but It seems to me others HAVE tried mechanically changing injection pump timing by physically rotating the VP-44 in its mount by several different methods - only to discover the pump and electronic control immediately compensated for that shift, and returned to the programmed timing.
Apparently the VP-44 and related computer controls use the cam sensor primarily as only a BASIC timing point, but then uses that and other computer inputs to arrive at the PRECISE injection timing - if that is so, the cam timing sensor input is NEEDED as primary (rough?) reference, but
not the total or ultimate defining element in controlling fuel injection timing.
Sure, I am a little late into this discussion on this board, but a few years back on a different board, and when I first was exposed to this issue, was pretty deeply involved in digging thru it's cause - The IAT function was considered as a cause, but as warmer weather arrived, further experimentation was dropped - and I personally had not been in a cold weather towing situation since then, and no longer active on that board.
OH, and by the way, I *do* drive the truck in cold weather - but the random miss/bucking is not evident when driving the truck unloaded or not towing.
BUT, regardless of whether the root cause IS the camshaft/sensor - or possibly tolerance variation in the electronic computerized control (my personal theory!), the easiest fix for most IS the resistor addition - but I already have so much extra added wiring garbage on my truck I'm reluctant to add yet ANOTHER switch and/or potentiometer to the heap that requires active monitoring or control.
I think my best approach will be to install a timer circuit that will have a small delay to allow normal engine starting, then activate a fixed resistance value to to the IAT for a set period of time, then be switched out of the circuit once enough time has passed for the engine to have reached operating temperature - all out of sight and automatic in operation.
I already have just such a device used for the VP-44 cooling setup I have installed on my truck, The circuit board seen here on the right:
#ad
OR, possibly an easier solution is a simple relay keyed to the ignition that electrically removes the added resistor from the IAT sensor, and once the engine starts, closes the contacts to add the resistor - and the resistor itself MIGHT be varistor/thermistor that provides the desired value when cold, but changes as the temperature increases within the 30-200 degree range to electrically "remove" itself from the circuit - I'll have to check to see what value varistors are commonly and easily avaiable.
Just in the "thinking" stage at this point - more to follow...

