51fixer wrote:
sdennison wrote:
Glenn Wegman wrote:
It was good that you brought that up Chris!
In my opinion, 25W60 does not stay on surfaces as well as 120W. It's viscosity rating is less when cold, so how can it? If I remove the rocker covers after an engine has not been run for a week there is very little oil film on the cam racks as compared to what I see with W120. I see a lot more rust with 25W60 as well for the same reason if the airplane is not flown regularly. 25W60 may be nice in cold weather, but other than that...
Just my opinion
Glenn, as an old Indy mech here, why do guys not use oil heaters & such on these engines? I guess I'd want a heater and pre-oiler prior to flight. I think I'd know long enough in advance of my flight to be able to plug the heater in and then run the oil through before starting.
Am I making things too complicated? STC's or the such prevent this idea?
Hey it's getting cold up here. Wanna come visit? Might have snow soon.

Remember, these engines were built to operate in the far flung reaches of the globe in all conditions.
The tolerances are not micro precision as in some of the finicky race cars.
On the Pond Racer, the Nissan V-6s required pre heat, even at Reno in the heat there.
We used heater strips bonded onto the oil tank on the T-6 and P-51s when we were at Northeast Philly to heat the oil. Sometimes we would use a salamander heater aimed at the engine as well.
Don't miss those days.
Also the P-51 and the Spit have pre-oilers.
Rich
Point taken. We heated the oil first with horid stick heaters in the tanks, then blanket heaters on the outside of the tanks, along with water block heaters for the races in Phoenix, Ontario, everywhere. Our objective was to get the engine to temperature prior to going out on to the track. We pulled spark plugs and then turned the engine over by pulsing the starter until oil pressure was indicated. Then we ran the starter constant and opened the fuel shut off until we had fuel blowing out the spark plug hole. Then warm up plugs and just prior to practice or qualifying/race, installed the race plugs. Quite a process I know. However, I'd think that at minimum, I'd preheat the oil and prelube using the pressure sump. My concern would be the typical long sit time between flights, short warm up time, high performance demand in a short period of time, and then back to the hangar to sit.
As far as clearances go, most racing engines have a bit more open clearances to reduce friction and promote oil flow. We used to run .003" on rod and main bearings pretty much as a rule of thumb.