mike.smith wrote:I use the same 20w-50 year-round, and I regularly fly in New England when ground temperatures are below freezing, and air temperatures are less. I'm not aware of any other recommendations from Sonex.
I have a removable pair of electric heating pads that I slip into the oil cooler opening so that they sit directly on/under the oil sump. The pads get TOO hot without some control, so I have it all attached to a 400W soldering iron rheostat so I can dial it down. I turn it on the day or night before I want to fly (my plane is tied down outdoors) and when I show up the engine block and cylinders are warm, and the oil is quite warm, often reading 100F when I arrive but cooling down once I remove the heating pads. So I take them out at the end of my pre-flight.
https://www.grainger.com/product/TEMPCO ... ?$smthumb$
There are versions of these pads made to be permanently adhered to the engine. The installation instructions note they should not be adhered over ANY bumps, not even raised letters/numbers cast into the metal. I opted not to add the permanent pads.
n502pd wrote:Has anyone used regularly valvolene VR-1 in other weights that 20w-50? I have not looked for other weights yet but just want to know what others are doing...other than putting the plane in hibernation!
Bryan Cotton wrote:When I lived in NY I was in a club that had a 1967 Arrow. We used to plug up the cowl, throw a blanket over it, and hang a trouble light with an old tech 100W bulb underneath through the cowl exit. It made a difference! Light bulbs are pretty safe.
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