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#1
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The local mechanic is suggesting we add a pad heater (glues
to the bottom of the oil reservoir on our A-65). He says if we keep it plugged in all winter it will not only keep the engine ready to start in cold weather, it will minimize temp changes and inflow/outflow moist air exchange in the cylinders, which will limit corrosion. I'd appreciate comments or suggestions from those with experience. The Aircraft Spruce website says no STC is required for these. Why not? Last, Are there any other inexpensive, safe solutions we should consider that would hold the engine and/or oil at a constant temp? I would think there might be some way to cover the engine compartment with old blankets and set a 75 degree thermstatically controlled heater or light bulb in there. Thanks. |
#2
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I've had Tanis systems on a couple planes. And I always left them
plugged in all the time unless I wasn't going to fly for a while. But my take has always been that using the sump pad alone and leaving it on all the time wouldn't be the best plan. The upper part of the engine would be at a colder temp and you'd get condensation. I've used the pad and the individual cylinder heaters together though. ben norton wrote: The local mechanic is suggesting we add a pad heater (glues to the bottom of the oil reservoir on our A-65). He says if we keep it plugged in all winter it will not only keep the engine ready to start in cold weather, it will minimize temp changes and inflow/outflow moist air exchange in the cylinders, which will limit corrosion. I'd appreciate comments or suggestions from those with experience. The Aircraft Spruce website says no STC is required for these. Why not? Last, Are there any other inexpensive, safe solutions we should consider that would hold the engine and/or oil at a constant temp? I would think there might be some way to cover the engine compartment with old blankets and set a 75 degree thermstatically controlled heater or light bulb in there. Thanks. |
#3
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![]() "ben norton" nospam.com wrote Last, Are there any other inexpensive, safe solutions we should consider that would hold the engine and/or oil at a constant temp? I would think there might be some way to cover the engine compartment with old blankets and set a 75 degree thermstatically controlled heater or light bulb in there. Heating pads, heat lamps, small quartz heaters; all have been used. If you use something that does not have a thermostat, use an inline baseboard heater thermostat, available at home stores. Add a timer so that it does not run all of the time, and you have a system. Of course for minimal condensation amounts, run them all of the time. -- Jim in NC |
#4
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"Morgans" wrote in message
... Heating pads, heat lamps, small quartz heaters; all have been used. If you use something that does not have a thermostat, use an inline baseboard heater thermostat, available at home stores. Add a timer so that it does not run all of the time, and you have a system. Of course for minimal condensation amounts, run them all of the time. Fellow I know also adds a small aquarium pump. The pump sucks outside air in through a large plastic jar filled with Silica Gel and then exhausts it into the crankcase breather, slightly pressurizing the crankcase with bone-dry air. Rich S. |
#5
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![]() "Rich S." wrote in message . .. "Morgans" wrote in message ... Heating pads, heat lamps, small quartz heaters; all have been used. If you use something that does not have a thermostat, use an inline baseboard heater thermostat, available at home stores. Add a timer so that it does not run all of the time, and you have a system. Of course for minimal condensation amounts, run them all of the time. Fellow I know also adds a small aquarium pump. The pump sucks outside air in through a large plastic jar filled with Silica Gel and then exhausts it into the crankcase breather, slightly pressurizing the crankcase with bone-dry air. Rich S. I can't imagine that having much capacity. Even if you only pull (push?) 10 gph through the line, you're going to saturate the silica in a matter of a few days, aren't you? KB |
#6
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![]() "ben norton" nospam.com wrote in message ... The local mechanic is suggesting we add a pad heater (glues to the bottom of the oil reservoir on our A-65). He says if we keep it plugged in all winter it will not only keep the engine ready to start in cold weather, it will minimize temp changes and inflow/outflow moist air exchange in the cylinders, which will limit corrosion. I'd appreciate comments or suggestions from those with experience. The Aircraft Spruce website says no STC is required for these. Why not? Last, Are there any other inexpensive, safe solutions we should consider that would hold the engine and/or oil at a constant temp? I would think there might be some way to cover the engine compartment with old blankets and set a 75 degree thermstatically controlled heater or light bulb in there. Thanks. I have a hotstrip by Reiff. It works well, but I don't leave it on continually. If it is cold outside, I make a point of going by the airport a day or three in advance and setting the timer so the heater works for 4-6 hours immediately before my intended flight. The manufacturers of these products recommend against leaving them on 24/7 due to rust issues. KB |
#7
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"Kyle Boatright" wrote in message
... I can't imagine that having much capacity. Even if you only pull (push?) 10 gph through the line, you're going to saturate the silica in a matter of a few days, aren't you? 10 gph???? Past the rings and valve seals? Rich S. |
#8
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![]() Quote:
if you only have an oil heater pad you should not leave it plugged in until you're ready to fly for at least 30-45 minutes within 12 hours. otherwise you might be in for some unscheduled internal corrosion and pretty expensive engine rework before TBO. frank |
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