Nitro Nerd
Gone - bye bye.
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Wow---30 years. You are obviously much more experienced than I am for sure! Not sure what you mean by "study" IC engines. I know how they work for the most part, and have 'fixed' a lot of them, rebuilt quite a few (sealed vacuum ports, head clearance and such--but I can't fully mod one or anything). But I'm still learning (and hope to 30 years from now). ;-)Yeah whoever thinks that an internal combustion engine doesn't like heat has never studied thermal dynamics or metallurgy and has no idea why a piston and sleeve are engineered with the exact specific tolerance that they have. In over 30 years of tuning and racing nitro engines I've yet to see one perform and run better in cold weather vs hot.
I can just tell you my experience. Last winter (30's-40's) I think I broke in 3-4 engines, and had zero problems. However, I've noticed when the temps get very, very hot (105+) they become temperamental regardless of the plug. I guess I'm not seeing the downside to running them in the cold, but would love to learn. I see you are in Houston (I'm in Dallas) so imagine you know the type of heat I'm referencing.
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Are you saying you cannot start a nitro engine if the temps are between 30-40 degrees)? Not sure what to tell you other than I have zero problems starting them. What problems do you have starting them in those temps?I'd be hard pressed to even get a nitro started at those temps.