From what I can see, the Red Dragon is no longer on the market.FBO service
Red Dragon preheater (I used a motorcycle battery rather than the much heavier car battery)
(when I was based at KBED)
From what I can see, the Red Dragon is no longer on the market.
I'm tied down on a ramp with no electric service. What do others use to preheat their engines when needed?
There are several preheaters that are self contained.I'm tied down on a ramp with no electric service. What do others use to preheat their engines when needed?
In what temperatures? What I do in 20* is different than -40*. My strong preference is a Reiff Turbo XP system and a 1000w generator. If you preheat with fire you need to stand fire watch throughout the process. Not fun when it gets really cold.
Any flame type heater will heat cylinders quickly and oil slowwwly. Very, very few guys who use Red Dragons use them for long enough to loosen cold oil. The cylinders will fire right off, though. And then you watch the oil pressure needle sit on zero. With a generator we can start the preheating in the dark and go away for a few hours with no worry about starting the plane on fire. I've done it that way for years. I have combustion heaters, too. Gotta carry a stove for survival gear so I add a heat transfer plenum just in case. My fav is an adapted ammo can.Last time I was on a cold, Alaskan ramp -- a couple of years ago -- all of the open flames had been replaced by Tanis/Reiff and Honda generators. A Red Dragon doesn't obviate the need for electricity, though they'll work with a car battery.
From everything I read, oil temp isn't the issue if you're using a multi-viscosity oil. It's the relative expansion of the engine's moving components that harms the engine.Any flame type heater will heat cylinders quickly and oil slowwwly. Very, very few guys who use Red Dragons use them for long enough to loosen cold oil. The cylinders will fire right off, though. And then you watch the oil pressure needle sit on zero. With a generator we can start the preheating in the dark and go away for a few hours with no worry about starting the plane on fire. I've done it that way for years. I have combustion heaters, too. Gotta carry a stove for survival gear so I add a heat transfer plenum just in case. My fav is an adapted ammo can.
Stick a quart of XC 20-50 in your freezer for a day and see how well it pours.
Engine manufacturers warn about lagging oil pressure after cold starts. I don't like to see my prop spinning and the oil pressure needle parked on the peg.
^^^This
Try pouring some 5-30 automotive oil on a day that is just barely below freezing and see how thick it is. An electric engine oil pan heater is advisable if you're in a winter climate, unless you always store in a heated hangar. Airplane engines are expensive...
Trust me, anyone who keeps a plane outside in Canada or the northern U.S. and flies in the winter has seen oil pour at 0c, -10c, and probably -20c. We have to add a quart every few hours in the winter, just like we do in the summer, and the storage box behind my tie-down spot is not heated.^^^This
Try pouring some 5-30 automotive oil on a day that is just barely below freezing and see how thick it is. An electric engine oil pan heater is advisable if you're in a winter climate, unless you always store in a heated hangar. Airplane engines are expensive...
Trust me, anyone who keeps a plane outside in Canada or the northern U.S. and flies in the winter has seen oil pour at 0c, -10c, and probably -20c. We have to add a quart every few hours in the winter, just like we do in the summer, and the storage box behind my tie-down spot is not heated.
In any case, an oil-sump heater isn't a bad idea; it's just that it's the least important part of heating an engine (and potentially harmful if it's the only part you're heating, because it will cause moisture to evaporate up into an otherwise cooler engine, where it might condense). The order of priority for heating is cylinders, crankcase, oil. (Of course, no reason not to do all three.)
Or, if you want a shorter version, heat from the top down, not the bottom up.
That's the best choice if it's available (and affordable) at your airport, because it warms up your gyros, battery, cranks, etc as well as the engine, reducing wear throughout the plane. It's not an option for many of us, unfortunately.When I was tied down outside I'd call the FBO before driving to the airport and asked them to tow my airplane into one of the maintenance hangars to heat it up.
Not many airports that don't have a heated maintenance hangar. While it can be expensive, it is the best way to warm up your aircraft, especially if you're worried about frost or snow. Even if they ask for twenty bucks to do it, how often are you going to fly in the middle of the winter? I find myself going up no more than once or twice a month if that. Just hard to get VFR weather and time off to line up. And extra twenty bucks a month just doesn't register when talking about airplanes.That's the best choice if it's available (and affordable) at your airport, because it warms up your gyros, battery, cranks, etc as well as the engine, reducing wear throughout the plane. It's not an option for many of us, unfortunately.
Many airports in colder areas offer that as a line service. I think I used to pay CAD $50 for an overnight preheat 15 years ago at CYOW (Ottawa, ON), including having the plane towed in by the line guy. I don't know what it costs now, but airports like CYND (Gatineau, QC) and CYGK (Kingston, ON) have big, shared hangars that you can have your plane towed into, and even monthly fees you can pay. Unfortunately, my current home airport has only the maintenance hangar, and it's usually packed with the aircraft they're working on.Sounds like a fantasy to me. If I could find a mechanic who had space and time to move a plane I'd expect the bill to be several hundred dollars. Do that twice or buy your own little Honda generator? Easy decision. And some of us fly to places where there aren't people or facilities around.
Phillip (of Switchbox fame) did a write-up on a Tanis or Reiff with 12v car battery and the switchbox when he was parked with no nearby power. Battery and switchbox in a heavy-duty locked case, chained to the airplane. He'd call the switchbox to turn on battery power to the engine heater a few hours before flying.
Wish I could....I just remember reading it a few years ago. Might have been more than 1 battery, I dunno. I'm in a hangar with power. I use the Reiff hot strip on the oil pan, which is only 200W.Hmmm... a typical car battery is 50 amp-hours or 12 X 50 = 600 watt-hours. A Reiff/Tanis is about 500 watts. So allowing for a less-than-100% 12V to 120V conversion efficiency, the battery will run the system only for one hour. It seems the numbers don't add up. Can you post or provide a link to Phillip's write up?
Did it a couple years ago during a winter trip. It was twenty bucks or so.Sounds like a fantasy to me.
It's about CAD $400 extra a month to have access to a heated hangar at the airport across the river from me. It might be different at a little country airport, but I don't live in the a little country town.Not many airports that don't have a heated maintenance hangar. While it can be expensive, it is the best way to warm up your aircraft, especially if you're worried about frost or snow. Even if they ask for twenty bucks to do it, how often are you going to fly in the middle of the winter? I find myself going up no more than once or twice a month if that. Just hard to get VFR weather and time off to line up. And extra twenty bucks a month just doesn't register when talking about airplanes.
You were lucky. Sometimes you'll find a friendly mechanic with a half-empty maintenance hangar who'll pull you in practically for free overnight. But don't count on that kind of luck most of the time.Did it a couple years ago during a winter trip. It was twenty bucks or so.
It's about CAD $400 extra a month to have access to a heated hangar at the airport across the river from me. It might be different at a little country airport, but I don't live in the a little country town.
At a fancy FBO at a major airport, having your airplane pulled into a heated hangar can easily top $100/night (maybe $200+ for a twin, because twins always get fleeced).
So is it a nice-to-have? Sure. Have I done it before a big family trip in the winter? Yes. Is it something I'd do every week before flying in the winter? No.
That generator is super hard to start in cold weather in my experience.
That happened a lot on my '59 Sunbeam Alpine. Solution was to keep plugs in the house so they could be installed warm.I also think that the spark plug may end up getting frosted over sometimes
That happened a lot on my '59 Sunbeam Alpine. Solution was to keep plugs in the house so they could be installed warm.
Only works if they are made by Lucas...OMG! I will keep my USB plugs in the house overnight now so my phone charges faster in the morning when I get in the car.