For a hour you’ll be fine.
Or just buy a thick sleeping bag from Walmart and use it was a cowl blanket
And while you're at Walmart, get a couple rolls of toilet paper to shove in the cowl openings.
Factory preheat recommendations- Continental below 20*F, Lycoming below 10*F. I'd guess the oil temp after an hour will be over 100*.
No way I am cranking a 10F cold soaked Lycoming I own. 30F is for a cold soaked engine with multigrade is my limit.
I agree.If the oil is 100f it’s not cold soaked
In mid-20 temperature, is it ok to leave a c172 with hot engine unplugged on the ramp for an hour before starting it again? Planning to fly somewhere for a quick brunch..
Old pillow cases (I use old flannel ones) work good too.We have some old parka sleeves we use on the prop.
Old pillow cases (I use old flannel ones) work good too.
No problem, check the oil before start up and it will feel warm to the touch. Hopefully you are using a semi-synthetic multigrade oil for winter.
Pillow cases? Engine cover makers offer insulated blade and spinner covers. I have quilted nylon ones That work okay but my favs are stretchy tight-fitting neoprene. Not so much for retaining heat. I don’t give much merit to that, but I don’t like ice and frost on my prop any more than I do on my wings.
I've preheated more airplanes than most. Two things I've never seen. A preheated engine melt any prop frost, even in close to the hub, and when using my best prop covers I've never recognized any warmth in the prop blades after any amount of preheat, including overnight.
Go ahead and get the 14 man tent and set it up covering the nose of the plane. Stockings for the prop, sleeping bag for the cowl, and don’t forget the smores.
Interesting! All my knowledge is theoretical and from reading at this point, i should grab my buddies infered or laser temp gun and do it both ways to see what that says... im always open to an opinion change especially theory vs real world experience..
Modern preheaters put out enough heat to get oil and cylinders heated evenly quite well in a couple of hours. I guess if you live in -40* temps and try to heat with a 60w light bulb you may need to do all you can to keep heat in. In my -30 limit with a Reiff system the prop isn’t a concern for preheating. I do want to keep if frost free, because at -30* the frost is hard and stubborn to scrape off and my Blockbuster card broke a long time ago.
When I use my MSR stove in my ammo can for preheating I have to open the front of my insul cover a little to allow air flow. To do that I have to take the spinner cover off. With that the prop covers come off, too.
Looks like someone was throwing laundry into the prop while it was still running. Smart.
Has she found this out yet?I cut the legs off pf my wife's yoga pants for the prop. Don't know if it really helps.
Has she found this out yet?