woodenshoes wrote:
You're preaching to the converted.
I haven't used one but the consensus on circulating tank type heaters is pretty positive for providing immediate heat. They are pretty much a cold climate standard on VW TDi's to get heat out of their diesels.
"IF" you believed in a circulating coolant heater, or were being paid to install one, how would you do it?? I realize what you're saying but without getting in to a lot of details it's not a simple as you might think (both the install and why I want to do it).
PS: Now that you mention oils, what is UFA Super Polar, it's rebranded Esso xd-3 from what I have read? Used to use Amsoil which is a PAO spec oil but couldn't justify the price and hassle of finding it. Also not all Mobil1 is PAO as per all the trouble Exxon got in to with the group 3 oils pawned off as full synthetic.
As far as the oils go, I feel like I've just swatted a beehive. I'm not one of these guys who read BITOG forums or WHMIS reports all day long, so I don't know which of the oils is the absolute best thing to have. I also don't know what the UFA Super Polar oil is based on. I suspected that new the Mobil1 oils that the US has been getting - the three "levels" - have been either group 3 oils or a blend. I haven't seen much of those up here so I've felt safe in buying the tried-and-true blue bottles, but I suppose it's something to watch out for now.
Anyway, sorry to sound like I'm anti-block heater. I truly believe that it can mask other starting problems if you use one every day, and that a car isn't worth a damn if you can't rely on it starting in Southern Alberta's winter. I suppose that attitude has to change at some point, because in Northern Alberta I'm sure they approach things a little differently, and diesels already have a hard time in Southern Alberta, and I think they're okay... For my wife's car or my daughter's, though, if I can't trust it to start up and drive home any day of the week, it's no good to me.
The funny thing about these block heaters is that because they're designed to connect to heater hoses, all they're really going to do is heat up the water in the heater core, which will immediately get swept away and mixed in with the rest of the coolant as soon as the engine is started. It's such a small amount of coolant that I don't see it significantly warming the total volume, and it sure as heck won't heat the cabin any quicker, nor is it softening the oil bond between piston and cylinder. I still believe that heating up the 3 or 4 litres of water that sit in the engine is a better idea than trying to circulate water through a hose with one of these things...
I would have to see it in order to know how I would install it. If it has a check valve, I would put it in parallel with the heater core, check valve resisting back flow when the engine is on (keeping in mind that the heater core presents a significant resistance to flow, so lots of coolant could short-circuit through the block heater and bypass the heater core, eliminating any benefit.) I guess you could put it in line with the return hose from the heater core, in hopes that warm coolant would circulate through the core and the block, and that you wouldn't just be heating up a small container of water without any circulation.
There are no instructions, I take it?