GumpAir wrote:All antique info for the most part. Those winter baffle kits are dangerous in my opinion. -30 on the ground translates to +10 at 1000 feet due to inversion layers. Then you're cooking cylinders and disrupting airflow in the cowling.
Oil dilution, that translates to dumping gasoline in the oil to thin it so it'll flow when it's extremely cold. That does nothing to address the issues with bearing clearances and metal on metal associated with cold soaked engines.
I've never seen an airplane with the oil dilution system actually used. And none of us up north that I flew with would ever use the winter baffles.
Again... Pre-heat if it's below 30F.
It just goes to show the instructions (and POHs above) written in the 1960's are not perfect.
If I think about other stuff happening in the 1960s - like smoking on planes, not installing seat belts in cars, drink driving all being legal, and
commercial aviation being 50 times more dangerous than today - it was a different time
You can just imagine the sentiment - "Cold? It'll be grand - just pull the engine through a couple of times, it will start without flattening battery". No bad things happened immediately, so it seemed like a good idea. To some extent, they were right.
Lets look at a
modern POH from a Cirrus SR22 - remembering this is using the same 1960's vintage engine with the same incumbent operations manuals. They say:
If the engine is cold (i.e. not warm) then it is recommended to pull it through a few times - they explicitly say this is done to save the battery.
If the engine is frozen (20*F) then preheating the engine is recommended - they explicitly say failure to preheat could "
result in internal damage to the engine".
An important distinction there, it's all about how cold the engine is.
With the benefit of a modern scientific understanding what happens to equipment in the cold, there are a bunch of guys who've actually written about this stuff recently - and preheating is unarguably the way to go in their professional opinion too:
http://www.aopa.org/News-and-Video/All-News/2014/March/10/Aircraft-maintenance-Proper-engine-preheatinghttp://www.avweb.com/news/maint/182846-1.html#bearingsDon't get me wrong. We spend minutes pulling my prop through at annual doing compressions / timing etc with a warm engine, like everyone else. No chance that does any damage

But when its been covered in frost all night, personally I prefer to avoid it because I want my expensive engine to last as long as possible. I don't operate my plane in those temperatures more than a dozen times a year, but if I did that all winter - I would be preheating overnight or for a few hours at least in the morning. I already preheat as it is, if possible.
That's my 2c, and YMMV.
I don't think anyone here believes pulling the prop through on a very cold morning does immediate damage. Your battery will thank you for it. But I think we can all agree that the bearings won't thank you for it, and over time the experts believe that does do cumulative damage.
I think we can all agree that preheating is a better decision, if you have the choice and want your engine to last as long as possible.