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Cold Weather Starting?

TX Rancher

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Any suggestions for starting the Roxor in cold weather? We are experiencing extreme cold (for Texas) After waiting for the air induction heater to cycle off I can get it to turn over but it will not start.

Thanks
 
B

Bister

Guest
Try cycling the grid heater twice. Might help. A battery maintainer will help. Roxor had a cold start bulletin I saw sometime ago that suggested 2 oil pan heaters, one on each side (125watt if I remember), a battery maintainer and a 60 watt battery heater.

9.1csace-120v | eBay

Wolverine Battery Heater Battery Warmer 60 Watt 110 Volt BH-60CSACE-120V CSA | eBay

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TX Rancher

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Joined
May 21, 2020
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Location
Central, TX, USA
Roxor Ownership
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3555
Try cycling the grid heater twice. Might help. A battery maintainer will help. Roxor had a cold start bulletin I saw sometime ago that suggested 2 oil pan heaters, one on each side (125watt if I remember), a battery maintainer and a 60 watt battery heater.

9.1csace-120v | eBay

Wolverine Battery Heater Battery Warmer 60 Watt 110 Volt BH-60CSACE-120V CSA | eBay

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View attachment 8649
Thanks< I did cycle the heater a couple of times. Will look into the oil pan heaters for future use.
 
B

Bister

Guest
Thanks< I did cycle the heater a couple of times. Will look into the oil pan heaters for future use.
The pan heaters should help. A good maintainer is never a bad thing. I have a few of them on things or move them around every couple months on things that are sitting lots or parked for the winter. I keep one on my pick up cause I hardly use it and when I do its usually dead. It will sit for a month or more sometimes. If you have a maintainer on it, that will do more than a battery warmer I think.
 

txroadkill

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Did you treat the fuel with antigel? Mine started this morning at 15. I treated fuel before it got cold. The fuel here isn’t blended or made for these cold temps. If it’s gelled your not gonna get it started till the temps rise.
 
B

Bister

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Did you treat the fuel with antigel? Mine started this morning at 15. I treated fuel before it got cold. The fuel here isn’t blended or made for these cold temps. If it’s gelled your not gonna get it started till the temps rise.
I never thought of that. That's probably part of his problem, if not the problem, if these things crank and fuel is good, they usually go. I never have to worry about that here in Saskatchewan, all of our fuel is switched over in October sometime so we don't really worry about it gelling unless you have fuel left from summer in a tank or something.
 

Djrmt406

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I had straight 2 from the summer. I put Howes fuel treatment in it before it got cold. The oil leaked out a bit around the filter until it warmed up, other than that it started and ran fine.
 

TX Rancher

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Did you treat the fuel with antigel? Mine started this morning at 15. I treated fuel before it got cold. The fuel here isn’t blended or made for these cold temps. If it’s gelled your not gonna get it started till the temps rise.
No, I did not treat the fuel, great point and I am sure that is what the issue is, 7 degrees her this morning.
 

Bob R

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I had a diesel Dodge 3/4 Ton pickup here in Southern Missouri for several years. When it started to get cold I treated the fuel at every fill up, and plugged in the block heater.
I Let it jell up once when I first got it. Turned cold unexpectedly. That one mistake cost me way more $$ than all the fuel additive I put in it the rest of the time I owned it.
Treated Fuel and a Block Heater will help to keep it running in the winter.

Bob R
 

2dutz2

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fFuel treatment if your fuel is not wintr fuel. Battery tender so the starter spins fast, that with a the working heater on board it should fire right up. I use NO pan or block heaters-and it is a steady -20/10 here in w. Colorado.
 

Tom W

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Any suggestions for starting the Roxor in cold weather? We are experiencing extreme cold (for Texas) After waiting for the air induction heater to cycle off I can get it to turn over but it will not start.

Thanks
I use Howes in the winter here in Kansas because of wild temperature swings we get in the winter. I use it in my Chevy Duramax also. I used to drive back and forth to North Dakota once a month and worried about the fuel blend when I headed north. Any good quality fuel conditioner will help especially if you live in an area where temperatures can rise and fall quickly, you’ll be prepared for cold weather, and if it stays warm it won’t do any harm. I always Cary a jump pack also, ya never know when a weak battery will bite you in the tail!
 
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