qbynewbie
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Sep 22, 2007
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Qbynewbie
OP: Excellent job on making what was without a doubt a disappointing but also without a doubt the right decision. Taking a suspect plane into the air is never the right decision if you can avoid doing so.
I had an E-I engine analyzer added to my 172G. It's taught me a lot about that O-300 engine. In Fly the Engine (great book, by the way), Kas Thomas recommends waiting until the oil temperature is at least 100 F before applying takeoff power. He also strongly urges against applying takeoff power while the oil is cold, noting that doing so under some conditions may exceed red line oil pressure. Other authors have recommended 120F before applying full power and I have adopted that for myself.
I fly in cold temperatures a lot. In fact, I'm going flying tomorrow at 1:00 pm, when the temp is forecast to be around 10 F and the wind chill around -5 F. I also try to manage my engine in a way that will prolong its life so I want to be aware of things like oil temperature on cold days. When the engine analyzer was installed, I had an oil temperature probe added. That lets me see the oil temperature without even starting the engine. As soon as I turn on the master, the analyzer starts up and I can see the oil temp within five seconds.
I use engine preheat when the OAT will be < 40F and will not attempt a start if the oil temperature < 30F. Plugging it in overnight with a heavy blanket over the cowling will have the oil temperature around 33F on even the coldest nights.
Starting the engine when it's really cold outside is facilitated by letting the priming fuel vaporize. Instead of priming and then immediately cranking the engine, I give it three shots of prime (no more) and then count to 30 before cranking the engine. Waiting that bit of time when it's cold out really makes a difference.
Once taxiing, the oil temperature will rise into the 50s quickly. If I'm taxiing directly to the runway, it's likely close to 80 by the time I get to my run up. On a cold day, the oil temperature will probably still be a bit below 100F when I'm finished with my checks. I could take off, of course, but remember that I want to be kind to my engine so I wait another two or three minutes for the oil temperature to get to 117F. Applying power and taxiing onto the runway will have it at 120F by the time I'm applying full power.
Yes, it's a few minutes of waiting but I like to be conservative about how I manage my engine.
160F before takeoff? What sort of engine would require that? For the Lycoming IO-360 in that 172R, 75F is quite enough.
I like to see at least 130f, that's on just about everything I've flown, also allows the cylinders time to get to 200F or so.
The "in the green" is a crap mindset IMO.
Watch your oil pressure on t/o.
Check your crankcase breather tube for ice on the preflight, and of course you probably should be running multi weight when it's freezing balls outside.
But hey, nothing flys like a rental
When you own, or rely on the plane for a living it's a little different.
It would cook my top end waiting for my oil temp to reach 130* on the ground.
Crankcase breather will almost never be iced on the ground. That happens in flight when it's breathing and the temps are cold. Warm shutdown will clear any ice from the flight.
Just my thoughts.
You'd be waiting a very long time to take off in the winter in most of the USA if you wait for 130F. Where did you come up with that number?
Well, it meets or exceeds every published recommendation from the FAA, every manufacturer of standard aircraft engines (nontraditional engines like a Rotax notwithstanding), and every engine guru with whom I've ever spoken. Do you have some contrary guidance or recommendation from such a source which you can share with the rest of us?
I had an E-I engine analyzer added to my 172G. It's taught me a lot about that O-300 engine. In Fly the Engine (great book, by the way), Kas Thomas recommends waiting until the oil temperature is at least 100 F before applying takeoff power. He also strongly urges against applying takeoff power while the oil is cold, noting that doing so under some conditions may exceed red line oil pressure. Other authors have recommended 120F before applying full power and I have adopted that for myself.
I fly in cold temperatures a lot. In fact, I'm going flying tomorrow at 1:00 pm, when the temp is forecast to be around 10 F and the wind chill around -5 F. I also try to manage my engine in a way that will prolong its life so I want to be aware of things like oil temperature on cold days. When the engine analyzer was installed, I had an oil temperature probe added. That lets me see the oil temperature without even starting the engine. As soon as I turn on the master, the analyzer starts up and I can see the oil temp within five seconds.
I use engine preheat when the OAT will be < 40F and will not attempt a start if the oil temperature < 30F. Plugging it in overnight with a heavy blanket over the cowling will have the oil temperature around 33F on even the coldest nights.
Starting the engine when it's really cold outside is facilitated by letting the priming fuel vaporize. Instead of priming and then immediately cranking the engine, I give it three shots of prime (no more) and then count to 30 before cranking the engine. Waiting that bit of time when it's cold out really makes a difference.
Once taxiing, the oil temperature will rise into the 50s quickly. If I'm taxiing directly to the runway, it's likely close to 80 by the time I get to my run up. On a cold day, the oil temperature will probably still be a bit below 100F when I'm finished with my checks. I could take off, of course, but remember that I want to be kind to my engine so I wait another two or three minutes for the oil temperature to get to 117F. Applying power and taxiing onto the runway will have it at 120F by the time I'm applying full power.
Yes, it's a few minutes of waiting but I like to be conservative about how I manage my engine.