2013/1/20 Viesturs Lācis <viesturs.la...@gmail.com> > Thank You, guys, for the answers! > > 2013/1/20 Sven Wesley <svenne.d...@gmail.com>: > > All my cars have, and all my former cars had, electrical heaters. You > don't > > need a pump. > > There are universal models that sits in the cooler hose that works > > flawlessly. > > Well, there has to be something that makes the fluid to circulate. > Either it is a pump, which allows to place the heater anywhere with > respect to motor. Or let the fluid circulate naturally, based on the > fact that warmer liquid has smaller density so it moves up... But this > approach requires to position the heater carefully with the motor > block. It will not just work anywhere... > > I suspect that Your electrical heating units have a pump already built > in... > > No, THERE IS NO EXTRA PUMP. Ever.
I have a brand new Toyota with a block heater. Guess what? T.h.e.r.e. .i.s. .n.o. .p.u.m.p. Heat transports itself, either via the water or the engine block. If I leave the heater on the wind shield starts to defrost. Why? Because hot water moves. And no, there's no pump. ;) /S ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Master Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL, ASP.NET, C# 2012, HTML5, CSS, MVC, Windows 8 Apps, JavaScript and much more. Keep your skills current with LearnDevNow - 3,200 step-by-step video tutorials by Microsoft MVPs and experts. ON SALE this month only -- learn more at: http://p.sf.net/sfu/learnmore_123012 _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users