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Schimmle 12-22-2008 09:17 PM

Oil pan heater
 
Now if I were to purchase an oil pan heater, which of the two would you choose and for what reason. The magnetic or stick on version. Has anyone had any experience good or bad with either of these?

dfweyer 12-23-2008 08:42 AM

Never considered purchasing one... probably as cold here in Nebr as it is up in Canada for ya.

StealthTL 12-23-2008 09:02 AM

I use the stick-on 200watt type, been on for five-and-a-half winters so far.

Works well.

You won't be putting a magnetic one on, no room unless you get under every day and take it off before you drive.

S

Schimmle 12-23-2008 08:03 PM

Wow...I had no idea how quicly those things heated up. Went down to a parts store and they plugged them in for me. I had no idea they were actually that good. I talked to a couple of the techs here at work and they all seemed to agree that they were great. I just need to figure out which style to get. They were leaning towards the stick on ones for the same reasons. How strong is the magnet and how freaking big they were. And this last week or so its been - 30 to -40. So you could say its kind of cold. And lets not bring up the wind chill either. Why do we live up here again?

Jeison 12-28-2008 01:45 PM

I got the stick on one last year when my car wouldn't start in anything colder than -9, and with it plugged in, it would start up until -32... big difference..

this year I got the upgraded starter... now it starts in -35 without bring plugged in!

moRotorMotor 12-28-2008 02:09 PM

It is kind of odd that your car would have trouble starting as little as -10c range, even without a block heater/oil pan heater. Was it not due to something else causing it to not start?

StealthTL 12-28-2008 02:34 PM

I stuck mine on the rearmost part of the oilpan, with the cord snaked up behind the intake manifold. The pan has grooves, just enough to prevent a nice tight contact, so I epoxied a thin strip of aluminum into one groove, enough to make a nice flat contact with the pan.

Like I said, this is it's sixth winter under there, scrubbing on snow and branches etc. and it's still on tight, though it's been covered in oil the last couple of years, but that's another story.....

S

Schimmle 12-31-2008 05:27 PM

I finally got one and I purchased the stick on one. The Magnetic one was WAY too big. I couldn't be more happy. I have absolutely nothing bad to say about it. I recommend it to anyone actually.

dozer 12-31-2008 06:18 PM

WOW im gonna get one too

Schimmle 01-01-2009 11:30 AM

Yeah I'm sure it gets so cold down there. LOL Whens the last time you saw snow that stayed around for more than a day, let alone numerous feet of it that stays around for 6 months?

RIWWP 01-01-2009 12:32 PM

I am considering getting various fluid heaters. It isn't nearly as cold here, but warming up the 8 in the morning always bothers me with potential theft. My driveway is about a car's length long, and the 8's plume of exhaust on a cold morning is a big flag saying "this car has the keys in it and is unlocked!"

Mac91 11-25-2014 09:55 AM


Originally Posted by StealthTL (Post 2783077)
I use the stick-on 200watt type, been on for five-and-a-half winters so far.

Works well.

You won't be putting a magnetic one on, no room unless you get under every day and take it off before you drive.

S

I got the 200 type stick on heater as well. It's been working well. I've just been leaving it on overnight and it starts up great.

I've been working out of camps though and was wondering if anyone has experience leaving their heaters on for 21-24 days straight. I didn't see any warnings on the heater but... It didn't say it was okay either.


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