treegump
Romans 3:22-24
Anyone have any ideas? Are there any other options to block heating other than a heated garage and the factory plug-in core heater?
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IIRC, they make some kind of a Mat you Stick on the Oil Pan as well that you Plug In.
http://kennedydiesel.com/ Look under "Truck Accessories". I've got the model 512 sitting on my workbench. Eventually I'll get it on there. Figuring on just splicing it into my block heater's cord.
Due yourself a favor and just permanately run a 3 way cord through there with an easy spot to plug/unplug which devices you want to use. I have this right behind my DS battery, so I can run my battery tender when I use my heater block, or just the batt charger without the heater.
This way you can choose what to use, and if a short or problems happens with one, your not wired in hard. THe last thing you want to be doing when its FRIGID out is splicing wires/chasing problems
A while back, I installed a permanent receptacle into my front bumper for the block heater. So, I'd like to stick with only one place to plug-in. But, you bring up a good point. What I'll do is get a nice, waterproof quick-connect for the pan heater's wire and splice that connection into the block heater's wiring. That will keep my (1) plug in the bumper and keep my butt from freezing if there's problem! Thanks, good thought!
I dont know if linking is allowed, but this is manufacturers site: http://www.espar.com/html/products/technology_coolant.html
I have espar (eberspächer here in europe) Hydronic 5 It is basically small oil burner which is controlled by timer or remote control or phone and it has own waterpump what circulates water through engine and heater core. If you can afford it i recommend it warmly, there is no thing called cold morning with that
Lubrication specialist seems to be dealer
well - it'll just be my accessory heater cause there was smoke coming up from the connection point. I'll check the resistance when I get a chance - but I'm pretture sure its fried.
possibly a oil pan heater
They make the magnetic heater that "thunks" onto the steel oil pan (bottom or side), rated between 150 to 350 watts house current. I would run a long extension cord from a timer plugged into a wall socket to the heater. Set the timer to come on 1 to 2 hours (depending on the outside temp) before you need to start the truck. Just don't forget to unplug and "unthunk" the heater from the oil pan. The attached photo is a 200W unit made by Kats ($29-$40).
Regards,
Franko
There's an outfit that sells pad heaters (do a search for that name without the space and dot com it). They have a couple of 12V models: FH-50 is 50 watts and draws 4.0 amps; FH-100 is 100 watts and draws 8.0 amps.ok - another question i suppose. Is there a heater that has a low draw that can be hooked up to the batteries? I sit in an office from 7ish-5ish. If I could turn something on at 3ish, that'd be alright. The alternator can just recharge the batteries (45 min commute)
Oil pan heaters are good in addition to a block heater (freeze plug or inline tank heater), but they don't take the place of one.