Cold Weather Starting
Posted: Sun Dec 03, 2017 7:28 pm
My first winter season with the new Beaver. Fresh fallen snow... touring the glaciers... mountain vistas. What a virtual world!
However... I'm now looking for engine starting advice when the air temp is low (~0c or lower). I am having no success despite following the MV checklist to the letter. Many times, I can get the engine to roll over and run for several moments but the oil pressure dies just before reaching 60psi. Pressure starts to climb (slowly) as soon as the engine starts but then... drops back to zero and konks out.
I'm using the cold cover and letting it sit for 5 or 10 min. No luck. I've even landed, shut down and tried re-starting. You'd think the engine would be warm and start easily but nope. I've even tried several uses of the primer from 'not used at all' to '5 or 6 pumps'. Usually, too much priming leads to a flooded engine. The clearing procedure for that works fine but then I'm back to my starting problems. It either cranks and cranks without starting. Or starts but loses oil pressure.
Ctrl-e works better but as a realist, that's not my style. Perhaps there's a trick I'm missing.
However... I'm now looking for engine starting advice when the air temp is low (~0c or lower). I am having no success despite following the MV checklist to the letter. Many times, I can get the engine to roll over and run for several moments but the oil pressure dies just before reaching 60psi. Pressure starts to climb (slowly) as soon as the engine starts but then... drops back to zero and konks out.
I'm using the cold cover and letting it sit for 5 or 10 min. No luck. I've even landed, shut down and tried re-starting. You'd think the engine would be warm and start easily but nope. I've even tried several uses of the primer from 'not used at all' to '5 or 6 pumps'. Usually, too much priming leads to a flooded engine. The clearing procedure for that works fine but then I'm back to my starting problems. It either cranks and cranks without starting. Or starts but loses oil pressure.
Ctrl-e works better but as a realist, that's not my style. Perhaps there's a trick I'm missing.