Re: Espar
That sounds about right. I don't own an Espar, but once sat down and crunched some numbers, making guesses about how many # of iron, aluminum, and water are in our engine blocks. The Cummins is pretty massive, and I found it takes a surprisingly large number of BTU's to heat that much mass up. Also, as everything tries to heat up, it begins giving off heat to the surrounding enviroment again, so the Espar is doing a major battle with mother nature, in two different ways. (heating big mass, plus that mass is trying to cool back off). And while all that is going on, you're also trying to heat/defrost the cab, which is also going to begin giving off a lot of heat to the local environment. Bottom line was that after a one hour run, I would have predicted a warm engine, but not a "hot" engine.
On the other hand, you'll find that running the Espar after the engine is already warm will do WONDERS for maintaining heat. The cure for your present situation is to start the Espar 30 or 60 minutes sooner. Don't be disappointed with the "slowness" of the Espar heater - part of the reason it is slow is because it is not burning but a small fraction of the fuel that would be used to achieve the same heat-up by running your engine.
Originally posted by osmith
Speaking of Espars. . I have a question for those of you who have them... . after an hour the air coming into my truck is just warm... . It's working you can hear it blasting away, but I expected a little more. What are your experiences with how warm your espar gets??
That sounds about right. I don't own an Espar, but once sat down and crunched some numbers, making guesses about how many # of iron, aluminum, and water are in our engine blocks. The Cummins is pretty massive, and I found it takes a surprisingly large number of BTU's to heat that much mass up. Also, as everything tries to heat up, it begins giving off heat to the surrounding enviroment again, so the Espar is doing a major battle with mother nature, in two different ways. (heating big mass, plus that mass is trying to cool back off). And while all that is going on, you're also trying to heat/defrost the cab, which is also going to begin giving off a lot of heat to the local environment. Bottom line was that after a one hour run, I would have predicted a warm engine, but not a "hot" engine.
On the other hand, you'll find that running the Espar after the engine is already warm will do WONDERS for maintaining heat. The cure for your present situation is to start the Espar 30 or 60 minutes sooner. Don't be disappointed with the "slowness" of the Espar heater - part of the reason it is slow is because it is not burning but a small fraction of the fuel that would be used to achieve the same heat-up by running your engine.