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rjdaugh
Joined: 30 Aug 2006 Posts: 195
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 8:12 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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At our local EAA chapter (37) meeting last night a local A&P said we really need to heat everything – not just heads or oil or cylinders but EVERYTHING! – when we fire up the engine in cold weather. He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps, you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the engine.
I have never worried about this. If it is not windy, I fly without regard to the temperatures. Am I destroying my 912S by starting it cold?
Randy - flew yesterday in teens and low 20’s F – over Mount Rushmore
Series 5/7 912S Warpdrive taper tip
[quote][b]
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_________________ Randy
Kitfox 5/7 912S
Black Hills, South Dakota |
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lcfitt(at)sbcglobal.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 8:35 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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Randy,
I know nothing for sure except the Rotax engine is manufactured in Austria,
not Florida or Brazil. I think it also gets cold in Austria. With the
volume of service bulletins and letters published by Rotax, I suspect that
if it was an issue we would have heard of it by now.
Lowell
---
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Guy Buchanan
Joined: 16 Jul 2006 Posts: 1204 Location: Ramona, CA
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 11:12 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
Quote: | He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps, you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the engine. |
YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm sure.)
Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
Happy Holidays,
Guy Buchanan
San Diego, CA
K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar. [quote][b]
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_________________ Guy Buchanan
Deceased K-IV 1200
A glider pilot too. |
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n85ae
Joined: 14 Mar 2007 Posts: 403
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 1:07 pm Post subject: Re: Cold weather starting |
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I bought a small space heater, hooked up a 4" diameter flex dryer
hose to it. Stick it in the oil cooler door, and let it run for an hour before
flying. During the really cold part of the year, I toss a blanket over
the cowl, and leave it run 24x7
Last week, I had to preheat my panel as well, because my AI would
not spin up level, and had a serious case of the leans until it got warm.
My IO-240B is VERY hard to crank when the temp gets down below
30F, however with the little space heater keeping it warm, it cranks as
easily as summertime.
Regards,
Jeff
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 3:31 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil pan,
and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about 80-90°
before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and hangs
there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
bottom of the cowl.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
Quote: | At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
> engine.
YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
sure.)
Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
Happy Holidays,
Guy Buchanan
San Diego, CA
K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
============================================================
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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gary.algate(at)sandvik.co Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 3:53 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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Lynn
I used a small electric forced air space heater - I used a splitter and some of the cheap aluminum clothes dryer ducting to feed air into the two air inlets at the front of the cowl and a blanket draped over the top of the cowl. The air would warm the cylinders and then flow down around the crankcase and out the bottom
I had this on a timer that came on at about 7.00am on weekends.
By the time I got to the field all of my temps (CHT and Oil) were up to standard summer temps.
This worked down to -20 degC and my Jab 2200 started first crank every time.
That was in N.Ontario - now in Adelaide Australia, my biggest winter problem is finding enough ice for my drinks!
Regards
Gary
Gary Algate
SMC, Exploration
Office Phone: +61 8 8276 7655
This e-mail is confidential and it is intended only for the addressees. Any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, kindly notify us immediately by telephone or e-mail and delete the message from your system. The sender does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message which may arise as a result of the e-mail transmission.
“This year, instead of sending you a Christmas card in the mail, we have made a contribution to [url=Arial]UNICEF Australia[/url]. We wish you a safe and happy Christmas".
Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Sent by: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
11/12/2008 10:08 AM
Please respond to
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com To
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com cc
Subject
Re: Cold weather starting
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil pan,
and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about 80-90°
before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and hangs
there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
bottom of the cowl.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
> At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
>> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
>> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
>> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
>> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
>> engine.
>
> YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
> engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
> sure.)
>
> Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
>
> Happy Holidays,
>
> Guy Buchanan
> San Diego, CA
> K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
>
> ===================================
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 4:16 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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I could chop some ice and send it to you, Gary...: )
Strange sight here today....a circular hole about 50 feet across in
an otherwise frozen lake near here, and surrounded by ducks, geese,
and maybe a swan or two...like they were having a tribal meeting or
something.
Another oddity...my flight instructor called me outside his hangar
(where I was working) to see a HUGE flock of geese flying over. He
asked if I knew why the one line of geese was longer than the
other...I didn't....he said that's because there were more geese in
that line....DUH!
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
do not archive
On Dec 10, 2008, at 6:52 PM, gary.algate(at)sandvik.com wrote:
Quote: |
Lynn
I used a small electric forced air space heater - I used a splitter
and some of the cheap aluminum clothes dryer ducting to feed air
into the two air inlets at the front of the cowl and a blanket
draped over the top of the cowl. The air would warm the cylinders
and then flow down around the crankcase and out the bottom
I had this on a timer that came on at about 7.00am on weekends.
By the time I got to the field all of my temps (CHT and Oil) were
up to standard summer temps.
This worked down to -20 degC and my Jab 2200 started first crank
every time.
That was in N.Ontario - now in Adelaide Australia, my biggest
winter problem is finding enough ice for my drinks!
Regards
Gary
Gary Algate
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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peteohms
Joined: 31 Oct 2007 Posts: 224 Location: Leander, TX
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 4:16 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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In El Paso we have to put a block of ice on the motor on a winter morning to keep it from overheating on start up.
Pete
[quote] ---
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_________________ Pete
Leander, TX
Kitfox III, 912ul, Grove |
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Paul A. Franz, P.E.
Joined: 02 Dec 2008 Posts: 280 Location: Bellevue WA
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 4:53 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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On Wed, December 10, 2008 8:11 am, Randy Daughenbaugh wrote:
Quote: | At our local EAA chapter (37) meeting last night a local A&P said we really
need to heat everything - not just heads or oil or cylinders but EVERYTHING!
- when we fire up the engine in cold weather. He singled out the Rotax 900
series engines because of their very tight fit compared to Continentals or
Lycomings. He said that even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or
lower temps, you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
engine.
|
As a matter of practicality, it would be pretty difficult to keep it all warm even
with when starting warm right out of a hangar without cowl flaps.
Quote: | I have never worried about this. If it is not windy, I fly without regard
to the temperatures. Am I destroying my 912S by starting it cold?
|
There's one sure way to tell and that is oil analyses. They are very sensitive to even
small changes. I had a loose air cleaner hose going to the turbo charger and on a
highway truck (not used in dirty conditions at all) and the oil analysis detected a
trace of silicon that had never been there before.
If you compare your cold weather operation oil analysis with summer oil analysis that
should show you how much of various metals are appearing.
--
Paul A. Franz, P.E.
PAF Consulting Engineers
Office 425.440.9505
Cell 425.241.1618
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_________________ Paul A. Franz, P.E.
Registration/Aircraft - N14UW/Merlin GT
Engine/Prop - Rotax 914/NSI CAP
Bellevue WA
425.241.1618 Cell
425.440.9505 Office |
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patreilly43(at)hotmail.co Guest
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Sbennett3(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 6:53 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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My engine heater is a can of start fluid on those cold mornings... (30 to 35f) I've been spanked on this group before so have at it. Steve Bennett NC USA 4/1200 912ul
In a message dated 12/10/2008 9:40:31 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, patreilly43(at)hotmail.com writes:
Quote: | Lynn, What is an "enclosure heater"?
Pat Reilly
Mod 3 582 Rebuild
Rockford, IL
Quote: | From: lynnmatt(at)jps.net
Subject: Re: Cold weather starting
Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 18:31:22 -0500
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil pan,
and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about 80-90°
before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and hangs
there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
bottom of the cowl.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
> At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
>> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
>> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
>> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
>> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
>> engine.
>
> YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
> engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
> sure.)
>
> Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
>
> Happy Holidays,
>
> Guy Buchanan
> San Diego, CA
> K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
>
> ===================================
>
|
Quote: |
://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
f="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List
.matronics.com/">http://forums.matronics.com
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Make your life easier with all your friends, email, and favorite sites in ony&ncid=emlcntaolcom00000010">Try it now.
[quote][b]
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jcrowder(at)lpbroadband.n Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 11:31 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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I’m sorry. I should have addressed that to Gary.
Jim Crowder
From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of gary.algate(at)sandvik.com
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 4:52 PM
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Cold weather starting
Lynn
I used a small electric forced air space heater - I used a splitter and some of the cheap aluminum clothes dryer ducting to feed air into the two air inlets at the front of the cowl and a blanket draped over the top of the cowl. The air would warm the cylinders and then flow down around the crankcase and out the bottom
I had this on a timer that came on at about 7.00am on weekends.
By the time I got to the field all of my temps (CHT and Oil) were up to standard summer temps.
This worked down to -20 degC and my Jab 2200 started first crank every time.
That was in N.Ontario - now in Adelaide Australia, my biggest winter problem is finding enough ice for my drinks!
Regards
Gary
Gary Algate
SMC, Exploration
Office Phone: +61 8 8276 7655
This e-mail is confidential and it is intended only for the addressees. Any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, kindly notify us immediately by telephone or e-mail and delete the message from your system. The sender does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message which may arise as a result of the e-mail transmission.
“This year, instead of sending you a Christmas card in the mail, we have made a contribution to UNICEF Australia. We wish you a safe and happy Christmas".
Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Sent by: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
11/12/2008 10:08 AM
Please respond to
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
To
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
cc
Subject
Re: Cold weather starting
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil pan,
and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about 80-90°
before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and hangs
there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
bottom of the cowl.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
> At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
>> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
>> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
>> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
>> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
>> engine.
>
> YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
> engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
> sure.)
>
> Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
>
> Happy Holidays,
>
> Guy Buchanan
> San Diego, CA
> K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
>
> ==========
============
--
Gifts!)
on
about
-Matt Dralle, List Admin.
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[quote][b]
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jcrowder(at)lpbroadband.n Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 11:31 pm Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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Lynn,
What did you use for a splitter?
Jim Crowder
From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of gary.algate(at)sandvik.com
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 4:52 PM
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Cold weather starting
Lynn
I used a small electric forced air space heater - I used a splitter and some of the cheap aluminum clothes dryer ducting to feed air into the two air inlets at the front of the cowl and a blanket draped over the top of the cowl. The air would warm the cylinders and then flow down around the crankcase and out the bottom
I had this on a timer that came on at about 7.00am on weekends.
By the time I got to the field all of my temps (CHT and Oil) were up to standard summer temps.
This worked down to -20 degC and my Jab 2200 started first crank every time.
That was in N.Ontario - now in Adelaide Australia, my biggest winter problem is finding enough ice for my drinks!
Regards
Gary
Gary Algate
SMC, Exploration
Office Phone: +61 8 8276 7655
This e-mail is confidential and it is intended only for the addressees. Any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, kindly notify us immediately by telephone or e-mail and delete the message from your system. The sender does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message which may arise as a result of the e-mail transmission.
“This year, instead of sending you a Christmas card in the mail, we have made a contribution to UNICEF Australia. We wish you a safe and happy Christmas".
Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Sent by: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
11/12/2008 10:08 AM
Please respond to
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
To
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
cc
Subject
Re: Cold weather starting
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil pan,
and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about 80-90°
before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and hangs
there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
bottom of the cowl.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
> At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
>> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
>> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
>> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
>> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
>> engine.
>
> YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
> engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
> sure.)
>
> Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
>
> Happy Holidays,
>
> Guy Buchanan
> San Diego, CA
> K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
>
> ==========
============
--
Gifts!)
on
about
-Matt Dralle, List Admin.
============
Forum -
FAQ,
http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List
============
WEB FORUMS -
============
Quote: | http://www.matronics.com/contribution | 01234567890123
[quote][b]
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gary.algate(at)sandvik.co Guest
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 12:59 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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I made my own Jim from some scrap aluminum - basically I made two x 4" tubes and riveted them to an aluminum enclosure which I just taped to the heater using aluminum duct tape.
I used that really light aluminum that you buy in a roll from hardware stores
Gary
Gary Algate
SMC, Exploration
Office Phone: +61 8 8276 7655
This e-mail is confidential and it is intended only for the addressees. Any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, kindly notify us immediately by telephone or e-mail and delete the message from your system. The sender does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message which may arise as a result of the e-mail transmission.
“This year, instead of sending you a Christmas card in the mail, we have made a contribution to [url=Arial]UNICEF Australia[/url]. We wish you a safe and happy Christmas".
"Jim Crowder" <jcrowder(at)lpbroadband.net>
Sent by: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
11/12/2008 06:09 PM
Please respond to
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com To
<kitfox-list(at)matronics.com> cc
Subject
RE: Cold weather starting
Lynn,
What did you use for a splitter?
Jim Crowder
From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of gary.algate(at)sandvik.com
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 4:52 PM
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Cold weather starting
Lynn
I used a small electric forced air space heater - I used a splitter and some of the cheap aluminum clothes dryer ducting to feed air into the two air inlets at the front of the cowl and a blanket draped over the top of the cowl. The air would warm the cylinders and then flow down around the crankcase and out the bottom
I had this on a timer that came on at about 7.00am on weekends.
By the time I got to the field all of my temps (CHT and Oil) were up to standard summer temps.
This worked down to -20 degC and my Jab 2200 started first crank every time.
That was in N.Ontario - now in Adelaide Australia, my biggest winter problem is finding enough ice for my drinks!
Regards
Gary
Gary Algate
SMC, Exploration
Office Phone: +61 8 8276 7655
This e-mail is confidential and it is intended only for the addressees. Any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, kindly notify us immediately by telephone or e-mail and delete the message from your system. The sender does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message which may arise as a result of the e-mail transmission.
“This year, instead of sending you a Christmas card in the mail, we have made a contribution to [url=Arial]UNICEF Australia[/url]. We wish you a safe and happy Christmas".
Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Sent by: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com
11/12/2008 10:08 AM
Please respond to
kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
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Subject
Re: Cold weather starting
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: Lynn Matteson <lynnmatt(at)jps.net>
Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil pan,
and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about 80-90°
before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and hangs
there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
bottom of the cowl.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
> At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
>> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
>> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
>> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
>> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
>> engine.
>
> YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
> engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
> sure.)
>
> Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
>
> Happy Holidays,
>
> Guy Buchanan
> San Diego, CA
> K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
>
> ==========
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 3:32 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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It's for heating a small enclosure or cabinet. I got mine at the
Grainger store about 30 miles from here. Here is an direct link with
picture, to the exact heater that I bought.
http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/items/3HK15
I put a layer of a woven fiberglass (Spruce calls it heat-proof tape,
P/N 09-31500) under the bottom side of the heater so it would send
more heat upwards, and not so much down, because I insert mine
between the oil pan and the oil cooler on my engine, and because the
oil cooler is so thin, I figured that the oil might get too hot there.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 9:38 PM, patrick reilly wrote:
Quote: | Lynn, What is an "enclosure heater"?
Pat Reilly
Mod 3 582 Rebuild
Rockford, IL
> From: lynnmatt(at)jps.net
> Subject: Re: Cold weather starting
> Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 18:31:22 -0500
> To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
>
>
>
> Another reason to run a 200 watt enclosure heater under your oil
pan,
> and a blanket over the cowl, so that temps in the teens or any other
> temp will see your engine oil at 106°, and your heads at about
80-90°
> before you're out of bed. I do this whenever the calendar says it's
> winter. When I start my engine, the oil drops to about 98°, and
hangs
> there for awhile, then starts to climb. I taxi at this temp, but
> don't go to full power until it hits 120°...all temps are °F. Light
> bulbs are too dangerous, IMHO, and too hard to manipulate from the
> bottom of the cowl.
>
> Lynn Matteson
> Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
> Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
> Sensenich 62x46
> flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
> system;
> also building a new pair of snow skis
>
>
>
>
> On Dec 10, 2008, at 2:07 PM, Guy Buchanan wrote:
>
> > At 08:11 AM 12/10/2008, you wrote:
> >> He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very
> >> tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that
> >> even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps,
> >> you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the
> >> engine.
> >
> > YES! Yet another reason to run the mighty 582: It's a snowmobile
> > engine! It doesn't care HOW cold it is. (Well, up to a point, I'm
> > sure.)
> >
> > Sorry, I always get a little delirious around the Holidays.
> >
> > Happy Holidays,
> >
> > Guy Buchanan
> > San Diego, CA
> > K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.
> >
> > ===================================
>
> >
>
>
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Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 3:36 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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Sounds like flashing material for roof work.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
do not archive
On Dec 11, 2008, at 3:55 AM, gary.algate(at)sandvik.com wrote:
Quote: |
I made my own Jim from some scrap aluminum - basically I made two x
4" tubes and riveted them to an aluminum enclosure which I just
taped to the heater using aluminum duct tape.
I used that really light aluminum that you buy in a roll from
hardware stores
Gary
|
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
|
Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 3:45 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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|
Ok, Steve, bend over....I would think that starting fluid just gets
the engine started, without giving any warmth to the oil and the rest
of the engine. I'm sure that even the most greedy of the engine
dealers...no names, please...would suggest that you warm the engine
to allow for free oil flow and less scraping/friction/damage when it
does start. I'm thinking that if you NEED starting fluid, something
isn't right...too much friction, too much drag on the starter,
bringing the battery down, cold fuel, etc.
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 593hrs
Sensenich 62x46
flying again after rebuild, and new Electroair direct-fire ignition
system;
also building a new pair of snow skis
On Dec 10, 2008, at 9:52 PM, Sbennett3(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote: | My engine heater is a can of start fluid on those cold mornings...
(30 to 35f) I've been spanked on this group before so have at it.
Steve Bennett NC USA 4/1200 912ul
In a message dated 12/10/2008 9:40:31 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
patreilly43(at)hotmail.com writes:
Lynn, What is an "enclosure heater"?
Pat Reilly
Mod 3 582 Rebuild
Rockford, IL
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Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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Dick Maddux
Joined: 24 Jun 2008 Posts: 516 Location: Milton, Fl
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 6:19 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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Pete,
I have the same problem here in Florida. A block of ice on the engine will usually get the engine cold enough so you don't over heat it! Sure hate to see Christmas go by. I know the ground hog will bring us another hot,muggy summer shortly there after!
Dick Maddux
Pensacola,Fl
One site keeps you connected to all your email: AOL Mail, Gmail, and Yahoo Mail. [url=h0000019]The NEW AOL.com[/url].
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Float Flyr
Joined: 19 Jul 2006 Posts: 2704 Location: Campbellton, Newfoundland
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 6:39 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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His advice sounds more than reasonable... The very worst thing you can do to an engine is start it. That being true, when you do start it you want to make the start as smooth and easy as possible. It’s easy to remove metal form the inside of your engine... neigh on impossible to put it back!
[img]cid:image001.jpg(at)01C95B80.DC729C90[/img]
Noel Loveys
Campbellton, NL, Canada
CDN AME intern, PP-Rec
C-FINB, Kitfox III-A
912 almost installed
Aerocet 1100 floats
[url=noelloveys(at)yahoo.ca]noelloveys(at)yahoo.ca[/url]
From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Randy Daughenbaugh
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 12:41 PM
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Cold weather starting
At our local EAA chapter (37) meeting last night a local A&P said we really need to heat everything – not just heads or oil or cylinders but EVERYTHING! – when we fire up the engine in cold weather. He singled out the Rotax 900 series engines because of their very tight fit compared to Continentals or Lycomings. He said that even if you turn the engine over by hand at 10 F or lower temps, you will be scraping some metal off and starting the end of the engine.
I have never worried about this. If it is not windy, I fly without regard to the temperatures. Am I destroying my 912S by starting it cold?
Randy - flew yesterday in teens and low 20’s F – over Mount Rushmore
Series 5/7 912S Warpdrive taper tip Quote: | http://www.matronics.com/contribution | 01234567890123
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Kitfox III-A
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Patrick.Best(at)telus.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 7:16 am Post subject: Cold weather starting |
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I would like to recommend using a Blow-Pot, like the northern bush-pilot pioneers!
For those of you who don't know what that is....
When a pilot was done flying for the day during the winter in northern Canada, the "flight engineer's" responsibility was to drain the oil from the engine into a large metal bucket and bring it indoors over night. The next morning, in temperatures as low as -60 F (yes, that's a real temp), the engineer would shroud the engine, light the kersone blow-pot stove and heat the oil in the buckets for a couple of hours. Then it would be poured back into the engine for the flight.
I read it in this FASCINATING book. I would completely recommend it. It's about 1930's era Junkers with skis. Crashes and flying without reliable maps. Good pictures too.
The site says it's out of print, but there's probably many copies around still.
http://www.harbourpublishing.com/title/BentPropsBlowPots
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