I prefer the pan heater. I've got Wolverines stuck to the oil pans on both my tractors. You select the heater size based upon sump capacity - plus the heater has a thermocouple - so there's never any worry about "cooking the oil". No coolant draining, no hose cutting; basically it's a peel and stick operation. Clean the dirt/grease off the installation area (bottom or side), stick the heater on, route the electric cord up and outa the way, slather aluminized silicone (provided) around the heater edges, and you're done. The silicone tapers the heater edges to zero so so weeds/twigs/branches out in the woods or the pasture can't peel the heater off while you're working.mffarmall said:It's not even July, but I wanted to ask what is the best heater that is simple to mount and use for the winter?
Sounds like you're condemning something you've never actually used yourself. Or perhaps you had disappointing performance from an undersized pan heater.Egon said:Pan heaters on engines are not that common in the colder climates.
Again, I can't believe that would/could/should happen to a properly sized and installed pan heater. The brand I use is designed to maintain the oil at a constant 125F. Plus the heat is directional, the pad heats the pan - it's not wasted on the snow. But the lower half of the engine gets warm enough to melt any snow within a foot. It's not unusual for me to come out in the morning and find a bare spot beneath the tractor.studor said:I have tried the pan heaters -- and on a tractor in cold climates where the snow is likely to reach pan height they are a PITA -- and they take a lot longer than the ones in the cooling system.
Egon said:Block or inline for a liquid cooled engine.![]()
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Let's try to keep this discussion relative to farm tractors in Colorado - ok? I'm not saying there's anything wrong at all with water heaters. The OP asked for input on what kind of heater to consider, I gave him mine.Egon said:There have been pan heaters used in the frozen north but the block or inline heater just work better.![]()
A lot more engine stuff gets heated by the circulating water than by just oil in the crankcase. Check out places with -40C temperatures and see what you find.
For real heaters you have to get into the one's used on over the road tractors.
Uh-huh. Except I'm not the one who ASKED for the opinions. I was a year off with that snow anecdote though - sorry about that. According to my photo album, it was December 23rd, 2004 - an extremely atypical one-day snowfall for this part of Kentucky. The photos were taken the next day, after the sun had melted about half of it away. Prior to that, I used my KM454 to clear all the driveways in the neighborhood. I regularly went through 3 foot drifts, a few up to four feet. Might not be much to you folks in cold country. But it should serve to demonstrate that snow did not prove to be an issue with the brand of (correctly installed) pan heater I use.Egon said:Greg, your just getting opinions of what works best from people that need the items in question to keep the vehicle running.