Matthew Rogers
Ejection Handle Pulled
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2017
- Messages
- 1,325
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Matt R
I have a 150 tied down outside in the cold - wish I had the funds for a hangar, heated or not, even with elec would be a plus. What I do have is a small 900 watt harbor freight generator that cost a whopping $99, a 300 watt magnetic oil pan heater, and an electric blanket that I sewed a waterproof cover around.
So my plan is to use the magnetic oil pan heater on the oil sump and wrap the heating blanket over the cowling with a couple of straps. That is about 400 watts of heat and the generator is fine with that load. However, I was thinking about all the waste heat from the exhaust of that little generator. I am trying to get heat - so why waste that.
I tied a length of 4" metal flex duct around the small exhaust pipe on the generator and it pumps out a stream of nicely heated air that I can direct into the cowling to add a bunch more heat with no added expense or energy. The temperature of that exhaust is not high enough that it burns my hand so I don't see any fire risk. It is a two-cycle motor so I guess there will be a little oil smoke.
See any issues or has anyone used exhaust to heat their aircraft before? If I am lucky, my airport will be melted out on Thursday so I can fly it out of the grass strip and off to its winter home. It is going to be a low of 10-25 (forecasts differ widely). I was down in Florida during this storm and the other owner let his BFR expire and decided not to do anything about the snow situation!
I have not used this setup yet, so don't go calling "you're gonna die", or "you must already have killed yourself". Just spitballing about using the extra heat from the exhaust to make it more efficient. I can even take this generator in the plane if necessary as the whole setup weighs 30 pounds.
So my plan is to use the magnetic oil pan heater on the oil sump and wrap the heating blanket over the cowling with a couple of straps. That is about 400 watts of heat and the generator is fine with that load. However, I was thinking about all the waste heat from the exhaust of that little generator. I am trying to get heat - so why waste that.
I tied a length of 4" metal flex duct around the small exhaust pipe on the generator and it pumps out a stream of nicely heated air that I can direct into the cowling to add a bunch more heat with no added expense or energy. The temperature of that exhaust is not high enough that it burns my hand so I don't see any fire risk. It is a two-cycle motor so I guess there will be a little oil smoke.
See any issues or has anyone used exhaust to heat their aircraft before? If I am lucky, my airport will be melted out on Thursday so I can fly it out of the grass strip and off to its winter home. It is going to be a low of 10-25 (forecasts differ widely). I was down in Florida during this storm and the other owner let his BFR expire and decided not to do anything about the snow situation!
I have not used this setup yet, so don't go calling "you're gonna die", or "you must already have killed yourself". Just spitballing about using the extra heat from the exhaust to make it more efficient. I can even take this generator in the plane if necessary as the whole setup weighs 30 pounds.