REFLECTOR: Cold Weather Flying

Scott Derrick scott at tnstaafl.net
Fri Dec 21 11:34:16 CST 2012


I was amused to see "oat down to 30f"!  30f?  really?  Not to belittle your experiance, but when I'm trying to get heat at -10f oat,  30 just seemed on the trivial side...

I have an operable flap on my front oil cooler exit, which does help in controlling oil temps, full open for takeoff and hot summer cruise.  I close it in the winter once I transition to cruise climb. 

I also have a rear lower engine cowl flap, that needs to be operable.  Right now its fixed open, which works well in summer but is too much air in winter.

Scott

Laurence Coen <lwcoen at hotmail.com> wrote:

>John,
>
>The carburetor has a 1/8" pipe thread fitting for the mounting of a 
>temperature probe.  It places the probe in the throat of the carburetor 
>where ice tends to form.  That is where mine is and it works fine.  One of 
>the things that I thought of trying were temperature sensing linear 
>actuators that are used to open and close vent windows on greenhouses.  If 
>they were used to operate dampers in the plenum plumbing you'd have 
>automatic thermostatic control.  After 10 years of tinkering I decided to go 
>flying instead.
>
>Larry Coen
>N136LC
>
>--------------------------------------------------
>From: "John Dibble" <aminetech at bluefrog.com>
>Sent: Friday, December 21, 2012 10:04 AM
>To: "Velocity Aircraft Owners and Builders list" <reflector at tvbf.org>
>Subject: REFLECTOR: Cold Weather Flying
>
>> Had a good flight from MS to NY on Wednesday.  Stopped at DKX Knoxville
>> for fuel.  That's a hard airport to find hidden in the hills.  A while
>> back I reported that my temps were too low in cold weather and not
>> enought cabin heat.  I decided to go after the source of the heat and
>> reduce the engine cooling air, see pic.  I thought this would be over
>> kill and I would have to trim it a bit, but it turns out that this just
>> gets the engine temps to the bottom of the desired range (250-300F) with
>> an OAT of 40 F.  At 30F CHTs are 240-245F.  Still, the oil temp ran at
>> 275F with the diverter flap fully deployed and that gave too much cabin
>> heat.  During descent for landing, temps got very low and I had no cabin
>> heat.  I would like to have a way to adjust engine cooling air from the
>> cabin, so I can have max cooling for T/O and reduce cooing air at cruise
>> and reduce it further for descent.  Has anyone done this?
>> When the OAT got down to 30F, I decided it would be a good idea to add
>> some carb heat even though my manifold pressure was holding steady.  I
>> did not see an expected increase in the carb temp gauge, but the MP did
>> decrease by a few tenths indicating that the carb heat was working.
>> Guess I need to work more on the the carb temp sensor placement.  I had
>> moved it to the fitting where the manifold pressure line connects (carb
>> outlet).  It seemed to be giving sensible readings at higher OATs, but
>> not at 30 F where it counts. Looking forward to returning to warmer
>> weather after the holidays.
>>
>> John
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
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