Winter flying in Alaska has taught me a lot about cold weather engine management and I’ve tried pretty much every preheater imaginable, and have created many of my own. Away from power, preheat requires a combustion source. A flame to heat an engine requires attending the flame. Not much fun with -30° and a breeze blowing. That minimizes preheat time to just enough to get the engine started. All the talk about made-up temperature thresholds is amusing to me. I’ve started Coninentals and Lycomings in single digits when I needed to. I’ve frosted plugs, too, and that’s a mission killer so I learned how to avoid it. Preheating below 20° per Continental instructions has worked fine for my engines, including Lycomings. Flying in those temps requires other prep so it’s not a burden until it gets cold enough to hurt. For that? I’ve evolved to 1000w generators and Reiff heaters.
Cold engines 101. Oil pan heaters thin oil and make starters spin better. Faster spinning helps cold cylinders fire more reliably but cold cylinders scuff. Air cooled cylinders are difficult to warm with a sump heater. Cylinder heaters make fuel distribution better and combustion easier, but starting with gooey oil isn’t good for the engine. A combination of both is the best solution. Hot air heaters are almost never used long enough to warm the oil and are probably the worst idea for engine health, especially propane heaters that pump water vapor into the cold engine compartment. Preheating the oil takes hours, not minutes, and quick development of oil pressure is the benchmark you need to shoot for.
In 20°-ish temps? I prime, pull the prop through several rotations, prime a little more, then start. Learn to minimize how many blades go by before the engine fires. Do some hand-propping in winter and you’ll figure it out quickly. Cold engines require more prime. Cold temps require more fuel in flight, too. Make sure your carb provides a minimum of 150° of leaning authority in the temps you fly in. Cover your oil cooler as required to achieve adequate oil temps. Don’t worry about cold CHTs, those are rarely a problem even in sub-zero. Learn what cold temps do to your prop efficiency and limit takeoff rpms if warranted. Dress like you’ll have to walk home.
Winter temps improve airplane performance. Have fun!