Wing covers are not bad. And turn your airplane so the sun hits the wings, but that takes forever. We have a spray bottle with glycol in it, buy it from the home drome. You can get heated battery blankets/aquarium or whatever to heat the fluid too. Works better when it is warm. The RV antifreeze is probably the same stuff, just a bit diluted.Go to walmart and buy one of those pump sprayers people use to spray weeds an insecticide with. Buy a couple of jugs of the pink colored RV/boat antifreeze. Use this to get rid of ice and frost on the airplane in the morning. If your plane must be outside this is the best way to do it IMHO. Dealing with wing and tail covers sounds like a major PITA to me.
Mine expired, will it still work?My CFI Certificate.
Go to walmart and buy one of those pump sprayers people use to spray weeds an insecticide with. Buy a couple of jugs of the pink colored RV/boat antifreeze. Use this to get rid of ice and frost on the airplane in the morning. If your plane must be outside this is the best way to do it IMHO. Dealing with wing and tail covers sounds like a major PITA to me.
What is this "frost" substance of which you speak?
For frost, I carry a bucket, a garden sprayer, towels, a gel blade squeegee scraper, and a jug of TKS.
The bucket I fill with hot water at an FBO, dump on wings, then towel off. Gel-blade what remains.
Warm TKS in the sprayer for other surfaces. Warm is important.
I was under the impression that there was some (probably minor) risk to using the water for fear of the water running back and re-freezing.
What is this "frost" substance of which you speak?
Turning the airplane into the sun has worked for me, too. Make sure the area over the fuel tanks gets cleared. That area may hold the frost longer than the rest of the wing.
Turning the airplane into the sun has worked for me, too. Make sure the area over the fuel tanks gets cleared. That area may hold the frost longer than the rest of the wing.
And more environment friendly than adding yet more odd substances to the airfields ground water.
Wing covers are great for frost, but necessary when you get a lot of snow. Snow melts, then freezes into a layer of ice that can sometimes require a trip to a heated hangar to remove. Not even a liberal application of antifreeze will get through 1/2” of ice frozen solid to the wings and tail. You either pay for a heated hangar for the day/night/few hours or have to wait for a warm day and spend the time cleaning it off.Go to walmart and buy one of those pump sprayers people use to spray weeds an insecticide with. Buy a couple of jugs of the pink colored RV/boat antifreeze. Use this to get rid of ice and frost on the airplane in the morning. If your plane must be outside this is the best way to do it IMHO. Dealing with wing and tail covers sounds like a major PITA to me.
What is this "frost" substance of which you speak?
It's some sort of made up phenomenon that the east coast guys are always talking about Tim ... between this and the "fake" IMC stuff, I never know WHAT they're talking about ... they even state they get SNOW sometimes
Ice season is in full swing around here. Zipped through the clouds, 7,000 feet, 31 F. Fortunately no ice formed, but it's happening.
I love the southwest, no weather issues normally except high winds in the spring and most of those are doable if you get things wrapped up before noon.
um, thunderstorms?
um, thunderstorms?
Pheonix/Las Vegas/Albuquerque get an average around 10" of rainfall per year or less. I doubt thunderstorms enter the equation too often.
Pheonix/Las Vegas/Albuquerque get an average around 10" of rainfall per year or less. I doubt thunderstorms enter the equation too often.
The nastiest, ugliest, most evil, most ominious thunderstorm I ever saw was on the way from long beach to Pheonix. That cloud system had "DANGER! STAY AWAY! STAY FAR FAR AWAY!" written all over it.