Well George's boat has Zerostart immersion heaters on the main engines as illustrated in pictures on another thread. It is 22 degrees and windy outside as I write this. It was like this all last week, then we had a warm and rainy weekend, then back to this on Monday. I have the engine room vents stuffed with a couple of big towels. The engine room doors have been left open, the mid stateroom A/C turned off and a small ceramic heater left on low in the galley. The master stateroom door has been closed and it's A/c running.
The temperature at the heat exchanger is 105. The cylinder block, measure at the outlet to the exhaust manifolds is 95. The oil pan is 75. Ambient temp in the ER is about 70, mid-low sixties in adjacent spaces (companion way, mid stateroom and head)
I recently added a Wolverine pad to the little 4 cylinder Cummins on my genset. The temp readings there are basically the reverse of those above. 105 on the oil pan, about 70 at the cylinder head and heat exchanger. This engine sits down in separate enclosed room below the galley with the A/C compressors and isolation transformers. BTW, the Wolverine people are about the nicest most helpful folks you would ever want to do business with.
I intuitively like the heat distribution on the mains better, but my diesel intuition is fairly amateur and naive. I leave the main engine block heaters on full time other than the summer months, and even then if there has been a big temperature swing and rain. Of course, when we are on the hook, they only operate when the genset is on, and the engines are still warm the first day after running.
Perhaps one issue is whether the heaters are run consistently, or just the day before someone wants to start an engine. In the aircraft example, is this the case or are they left on all the time? At the Hatteras Owners University, Roger Wetherington also recommended leaving them on all the time, to fight condensation issues.
Thoughts/conclusions of the group?