Dan Thomas
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Dan Thomas
Hair dryers typically have cheap little brush-type motors in them. Brushes make sparks constantly, and those motors aren't sealed. Any fuel leakage getting together with that sparking is going to immolate the airplane.The flight school I went to most times handed me a hair dryer and instructed me to put it in the cowl with cowl plugs installed. Drag a extension cord out to the plane on the ramp. Sometimes they would plug them in to engine heaters but 9 times out of 10 I used the hair dryer. Couple times I walked back into the school after plugging in the dryer and the instructor said "you ready to go" as soon as I walked in. The hair dryer may have run for 5-10 minutes max. They ran the engines to at least 3000 hrs.
Bad habits die hard as I use a hair dryer on my own plane in the hangar in conjunction with a oil pan heater. I do fly my plane multiple times a week so hopefully I won't have much corrosion to deal with.
We used car warmer heaters. Watch for the ones that use shaded-pole fan motors. They have no brushes, although they still have a thermostatic temperature control switch that will make a spark. I took one apart once and disabled that switch, bypassing it so the heater just ran all the time. I just didn't leave it unattended for any great length of time.