Bottom line is, Mother Nature makes all the rules, and Mother Nature always wins if you try and break those rules.
A big bore Continental or Lycoming holds about 3 gallons of oil. Just for fun, pour three gallons of oil in a metal gas can and stuff it in your deep freeze overnight. Next morning take your can out, and set it in front of your kerosene space heater, or whatever else you might want to heat it with. I guarantee you that you can get the outside of that can damn near red hot, and the outer layer of oil near boiling, but still have a big ball of frozen oil floating right in the middle.
I have watched guys, not heard rumors, but watched guys myself take off after piss-poor pre-heats, get in the air and make 180's right back to the ground with oil starvation engine failures. Culprit being frozen oil in the sumps.
Engines are expensive, and it's a good way to get killed.
MTV is so right. Slow and gentle on the heat. Get the best engine blanket you can buy (keep it in the airplane as an emergency sleeping bag too), and keep your gyros warm.
One of our Golden Rules in the Arctic was the colder it gets, the slower you move. And there's very good reason for that.
Gump


