The-sky-captain Posted December 23, 2008 Report Posted December 23, 2008 This is the first winter that I have had my Mooney and was wondering if any of you guys in the cold wx states used a specific method to get the bird started in colder temps. Quote
67M20F Posted December 23, 2008 Report Posted December 23, 2008 I have mine in a hager that is kept at about 60f. When i was doing my traing in 172's about ther only diff, was leting it warm up before take off. Sometime i would have to sit at run up for a long time. But with my mooney i just keep cowl flaps closed to try to keep heat in. But like i said its warm before its pulled out. Quote
67M20F Posted December 23, 2008 Report Posted December 23, 2008 Before I had my hanger tho i did use a gas fired heater on the tailgate of my truck pointed at the spinner, with cowl flaps closed and after about 5 min the motor was warm. Quote
The-sky-captain Posted December 23, 2008 Author Report Posted December 23, 2008 I have an unheated hanger but i do have two space heaters that are configured with scat hose to go up into the cowl flaps. I turn these on the night before I fly and it seems to work fairly well at getting motor and oil warmed up. Quote
Cruiser Posted December 23, 2008 Report Posted December 23, 2008 I have Rieff heaters on the cylinders and an oil sump heat pad. I put a ceramic box heater in the cockpit and turn it on when I get to the hangar. One trick I find very helpful is to prime the engine and then wait at least a minute before attempting the start. I usually will get a start in two or three blades. Quote
mooniac227 Posted January 10, 2009 Report Posted January 10, 2009 Quote: Cruiser I have Rieff heaters on the cylinders and an oil sump heat pad. I put a ceramic box heater in the cockpit and turn it on when I get to the hangar. One trick I find very helpful is to prime the engine and then wait at least a minute before attempting the start. I usually will get a start in two or three blades. Quote
MooneyPilot231 Posted January 16, 2009 Report Posted January 16, 2009 Summer I can hit the primer for 7 seconds and it will fire off immediately. Once it got coldI had real problems starting my 231. Here is what I came up with. Prime 10 seconds, turn on axuillary fuel pump hit the starter and at the same time hold the prime button down. Throttle open 1/2".As soon as the engine fires turn off the axuillary pump but you may have to keep the primer going untilthe engine smooths out. I had fits until I figured all this out. Takes a little hand coordination butmy plane went from several minutes to start to several seconds. This morning it was 23 degrees and using this method it fired right up. If you forget to turn the pump off it will not hit on allcylinders. You will figure out what is up pretty quick. Let me know if this works on the 201 as wellas it did on the 231...good luck. Quote
The-sky-captain Posted January 16, 2009 Author Report Posted January 16, 2009 THe problem I was running into when it got cold was flooding. The guy that gave me my check ride told me to use the boost pump until the fuel pressure was well into the green. The cold wx was making the gauge read slow hence the flooding. Now I keep the pump on for 3-5 seconds and it works well. Quote
alun Posted January 19, 2009 Report Posted January 19, 2009 Quote: MooneyPilot231 Summer I can hit the primer for 7 seconds and it will fire off immediately. Once it got cold I had real problems starting my 231. Here is what I came up with. ...... This morning it was 23 degrees . Quote
mooniac58 Posted January 21, 2009 Report Posted January 21, 2009 Quote: alun i wish I had your definition of cold!!!!!! its hailing and raining, blowing a dog of a chain and about 3 degrees outside. and that's not a bad winters day! Of course, is it possible that MooneyPilot231 is talking about F and Alun in C? 23F = -5C and 3C = 37F ~ hard to say because I know in England they seem to use C and F interchangibly Quote
alun Posted January 21, 2009 Report Posted January 21, 2009 maybe that explains it..... i would love a cold weather day to be 23 deg celcius!! Quote
mooniac58 Posted January 22, 2009 Report Posted January 22, 2009 Quote: alun maybe that explains it..... i would love a cold weather day to be 23 deg celcius!! A cold day in Hawaii is around 23C (73F) Of course it is 80F right now so no need to break out the long sleeve shirts just yet! Quote
KSMooniac Posted January 22, 2009 Report Posted January 22, 2009 The 201 and 231 fuel systems are quite different. I've found that 3-5 seconds of priming (throttle cracked slightly open, mixture rich) followed by 30-60 seconds of waiting will usually result in a quick start. Quote
MooneyPilot231 Posted January 23, 2009 Report Posted January 23, 2009 I wish I was talking Celcius! People in other parts of the country don't think it gets cold in Texas. Not true! Not all the time, but mid-twenties (Farenheit) is common. The titanium in my lower back and neck have instructed me to move toa year round warm climate next year when I retire.... Quote
Rae Posted January 23, 2009 Report Posted January 23, 2009 Quote: The-sky-captain This is the first winter that I have had my Mooney and was wondering if any of you guys in the cold wx states used a specific method to get the bird started in colder temps. Quote
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