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![]() "dave" wrote in message ... Matt, if the entire engine was warm you'd be correct. The problem is that any unheated parts of the engine may be cold enough to allow condensation. You need to keep the entire engine at the same temperature. So if you use a pan heater and cylinder heaters and also use an insulated cowling cover, you should be fine by leaving the heaters on all winter because the entire engine should be warm. That's the theory anyway. Yes, but I can't imagine anyone using an engine heater without a thermal cover. I have a semi-custom cover that goes clear over the cabin. It's sweet in that the cabin is nice and warm, too. No frozen butt cheeks when you first get in. Using an engine heater without a thermal blanket is like having a furnace in your home and leaving the windows open. Yet, stranger things have happened... I'm trying to decide which way I want to go. I had a pad heater on my citabria that I would turn on for several hours before I flew if it was cold out. I just got my bonanza a couple of weeks ago and I'm thinking about using the full Rieff package or getting a portable red dragon. What I like about the Reiff is that it's always with you and only needs an electrical outlet. I've seen a few places that have like T-hangars with an electrical outlet near by. The advantage of the red dragon is that you can use it anytime and it should warm the engine up in about 30 minutes. The disadvantage is that to make it truly portable, you need to get the 12V model and run it off your battery. Not a problem at my airport, I'll simply run it off my car battery but I can imagine being at some airport on a cold Sunday afternoon with a very warm engine and a dead battery. Will it fit in your baggage compartment? -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO (MTJ) |
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