Damn you fellas are arguing about something that would be so easy to test in any airplane with CHT and a breeze. Are we taking bets? I bet OWT.
Nothing OWT about it. I fly radial engine planes specifically placarded to perform run ups into the wind.
And as others have pointed out it is more about the time spent idling while performing the non-runup tasks on the checklist.
A dive into the (book that serves as the) AFM it tells you to complete the run up portion in less than 30 seconds.
It's not that there's no air flow, it's that it is very uneven. The aft side of the cylinders are all sitting next to a cooking hot exhaust manifold (post mag and prop check) while the fronts are getting a slight cool breeze. Bad.
On occasions when my location in the conga line prevents air flow consideration I find that I can smell it getting hot before the CHT registers it (CHT is single probe on these old geezers so you aren't getting a complete story, so the sensor on the front of your head comes in handy).
That’s my challenge in the Waco. Takes FOREVER to get the oil up to temp. If it’s cool out, I basically point away from the wind while waiting for the oil to warm up and then point into the wind for the actual run up.
Been there many times. With the R985 and R1340 I run them at 1000rpm with the carb heat on and the oil cooler shutters closed. The latter probably isn't doing anything but carb heat definitely speeds things up.
As I figure it, 15 minutes spent listening to a radial is not time wasted in this life.
As for consideration of others during run up, well let's just say it is part of training but there are a lot of a**holes in this world.
A few years so I felt like one of them. Tons of people leaving the Arlington air show and I got blocked in line with my tail pointed at the row of RVs. One of my GoPro cameras caught the sight of picnic awnings taking a beating and debris flying. In the middle sat this old dude in a chair, hair blowing back and smiling.