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Heaters: Engine/Transmission

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I know some of you folks up in the interior of Alaska (any maybe other more tropical areas) are using transmission heaters. I just wanted to know what kind you are using and how you set them up?



I have one friend up in Delta Junction, AK that is running dual block heaters, dual battery blankets, a transmission heater, and a trickle charger when she plugs in on the company nickel at work.



Stay warm,

Dave
 
I've got a 5. 9 and run a single factory block heater, two 175 watt pads on the oil pan, one 25 watt under each battery, and a 50 watt single pad on the transmission. I keep the battery pads unplugged until it gets colder than -10 because they were gassing too much otherwise. I also don't recommend putting anything hotter than a 75 watt on the transmission to eliminate burnt trans fluid. Three hours of plug in time at -40 and she fires right up. My next toy is going to be an Espar heater from mopar for the 06, had one on the old 97 and sure miss it. I also zip up my cold front when it's under 0. Mopar makes a very good quality cold front to block off your radiator. My local NAPA sells all of the winterization pads. I think they are zero-start brand but I can check if you need it.
 
I run the Cloudrider front and the factory block heater plus the Mopar/Wabasto cab heater when no power is available. At -40C everything starts and within 2 Km I have the beginnings of engine heat.
If I have to lay over the Cab Heater keeps us toasty warm and the motor warm. The transmission does get some residual heat. Only the factory battery blankets (Felt - Poor choice as it retains water) Average battery life here in Alberta is 3 years due to the long cold winters, regardless of the running time.
 
Thanks for the feedback. Good stuff.



One thing you don't see as much nowadays are folks using the tank type inline coolant heaters.



I was at the dealer today and asked about the mopar diesel heaters (Webasto I think). They want $1485 for the parts.



Courierdog, did you install the Webasto yourself?
 
I have one friend up in Delta Junction, AK that is running dual block heaters, dual battery blankets, a transmission heater, and a trickle charger when she plugs in on the company nickel at work.



Sounds like my work truck on the slope, but add an oil pan heater and a Webasto Blue Heat to it. I bet the truck draws 1 KW/hr with all that.





On my 01 I have an oil pan heater pad that I got at NAPA. Don't have the part number I just went in and told the guy I wanted one and he brought me out a couple to choose from. As for mounting, I cleaned the side of the pan really well with paint thinner and then brake clean. I applied a large quantity of good silicone sealer to the pad and stuck it on, then I applied a good coating on the outside of the pad and around the edges and stuck a big piece of aluminum foil over it. Once it dried I pulled what foil off that I could. I basically just wanted something to cover the pad. 7 years later its still there and working fine.
 
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