Humm, ok couple of questions, the rough cost of a Espar and what about calculating the effect of a 4000 btu heater after the truck has been running for about 1/2 min.
Short answer: A 4000 Btu heater will only help the warming process by ~1 degree per minute. You probably won't be able to tell the difference in warmup time with or without a heater of this size.
Warning: LONG ANSWER FOLLOWS!
OK, it's snowing here, so I've had some fun playing around with the numbers and researching this. There are several big unknowns built in to the calculations, so don't take the exact numbers as gospel. And go grab yourself a cup of coffee before reading on.
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A 4000 BTU heater would raise the temperature of 6 gallons of water by about 1. 4 degrees per minute. But don't forget, we're also trying to raise the engine temperature, so that is ~930 pounds of cast iron that also needs to be heated up. Practically speaking, I don't think you would be able to tell the difference in heat-up times with or without the 12 volt "booster" in the water system. The booster would help some in maintaining temperature, at idle, once you were warmed up, I just don't think it would shorten the warm-up time by much.
Basically, we're trying to heat up three things here: the coolant in the system, the iron in the engine block, and the air in the cab. The net output of the Espar is about 10,000 Btu/hour. Here's how much 10,000 Btu would heat up each of these items, if all of the heat could be transferred to just one of the three (technically not possible):
6 gallons water, ~48 pounds, 208 degrees
4200 cubic feet of air, ~336 pounds, 124 deg.
1 engine block, ~932 pounds, 97 degrees
I chose 4200 cf air because that is my guess as to what the blower puts out in an hour, if it runs at 70 cfm on the low setting.
I tried to research the VW system TowPro mentioned, but found only information about 120 volt block heaters. His wife’s Jetta may just warm up faster because it is so much smaller, thus much less mass to heat. But since it warms in only 0. 2 miles, let’s assume for the sake of argument that there really is a 12 volt aux heater. If the system used a grid heater in the car's HVAC system that warms the air going through the heater core, but not the water, then the heat would come up much quicker. Next, assume the vent control is set to "recirc". Now, instead of trying to heat a massive block of iron + the coolant + 4200 cubic feet of air, we're only trying to heat ~87 cubic feet of air, the amount of air in a jetta. With 50 amps (the Jetta alternator puts out 70 total), we could get about 2050 Btu/hr, which would heat the air at about 20 degrees per minute. Doesn't sound like much, but from a 20 degree start it means in 3 minutes your heater is blowing 80 degree air, which would feel warm in comparison to the 20 degrees. This is all pure speculation on my part; we need to get TowPro to find a wiring diagram for that Jetta and see what's really going on. My best guess is that the Internet talk was just some folks who don't know much about cars confusing the 120V block heater with something else. The 120 volt heater looks like what TowPro heard described; see
http://www.vwofnewport.com/accessories/jetta/blockheater.htm
The bottom line is that there is a lot of energy (BTU's) in a gallon of diesel fuel; that's why a gallon of the stuff can move a big truck 15 to 20 miles down the road. 50 Hp, a light load, is equivalent to 127,000 Btu/hr, and remember that more than 50% of the diesel burned goes out as “waste heat”, so you can figure at light load your engine is putting out well over 150,000 Btu/hr of waste heat, and this is why it can heat up in “only” 5 minutes once you start driving it. So, there are two keys to why the ESPAR and Webasto work so well:
1) They burn diesel, releasing lots of BTU's
2) We give them a "head start" on the warm up by starting the heater an hour or more before our planned departure. Even if they only heat up at ~2 degrees per minute, an hour of that makes a huge difference. Heck, if it is not but 32 degrees outside, even 15 to 20 minutes would make a difference.
So, what's your goal? If you want to warm your block faster to reduce engine strain, plus defrost your cab, then you need to go with the diesel heater. Get the remote so you can start it from inside your house. If you are just trying to get some in-cab comfort sooner, you might get there with a 12 volt heater, provided you can find one that recirculates the cabin air. I think the performance is going to leave you wanting more, but the cost is only $100 so you could try it without breaking the bank. One I found was:
http://www.skingco.com/convenience/other/2heater.htm#featuresco3000c This shows a 12 volt, 25 amp “back seat heater”, for $100. They claim 1100 Btu/hr; if it works you could install 2 and use 50 amps.
Bear in mind that a 75 watt light bulb puts out ~250 Btu/hr, so that 1100 Btu/hr heater is like having four 75 watt bulbs in your cab. Its heat, but not that much heat. Even with two of these I think you are going to be disappointed. But, if you get bored some cold afternoon, find a cheap hair dryer that only puts out 750 watts, or a space heater that has a "low" setting in that range, and see if the rate of heat-up makes you happy or not. You could do this experiment almost for free, just don't electrocute yourself in the process with three or four extension cords all plugged in to each other!
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Cost of the Espar is ~1200 if you install it yourself, although there was a group purchase previously at ~900 so we might see that number again sometime. The Webasto group purchase price is well under 1000. The Webasto has more power (17,200 input vs. 13,700 for Espar D4) but the kit is "generic" versus set up specifically for the Dodge, so you'll need to be a slightly better shade-tree mechanic if doing it yourself. Most people have reported the better part of a day spent installing these kits.
I don't have one of these heaters yet, but I think it is going to be one of those things that once you have it, you don't know how you ever lived without it.