Summer has barely begun and I am already thinking of winter storage. I move at my own pace, lol Actually I've been thinking about it since I took the CB out of my climate controlled storage unit last winter. I need that space for other items this year.
The Plan - I have a pole barn with concrete floor but it is not heated or insulated. My thought is to build a crate and insulate it just like a house, and use a retail electric forced air, space heater, that has a thermostat.
I would be interested on thoughts or stories of ppl that have tried or done this. Also similar stories of ppl who have used electric heat on a garden shed either insulated or not. I would also be interested in hearing about winter storage tips and also stories from ppl that store in cold climates without heat. I live in central Illinois so the weather gets to freezing and below.
The bike doesn't care about 'climate controlled'.
Once it is sheltered out of the rain and sun the only other thing I would care about is #1- protection from mice and #2- a battery tender.
Do folks still spray fogging oil into the cylinders through the spark plug holes for winter storage?
I can't comment on your specific situation, but my garage gets into the low-40's during the winter. I've not experienced any issues with winter storage, though I do usually suffer from an acute case of PMS (Parked Motorcycle Syndrome). I use battery tenders and Stabil religiously and the bikes fire right up in the spring. I've never used fogging oil.
IMHO, your bike does not need fogging for winter storage in a heated or unheated garage. I reserve fogging to my 2-cycle Mercury outboard motor which I store outside under a cover.
The most important thing is to store the bike with "pure gas" (E0) no ethanol, because ethanol (E10) gasoline absorbs water and has a very short shelf life. Of course, use Stabil or equivalent during storage.
If you wanted to store your motorcycle during wintertime, cold storage is better than warm. Chemical reaction depends on temperature: low temperature --> low chemical reaction (rust).
That's why you put your food in a fridge.
Just get the battery out and store it at a warm place.
Or keep your bike outside covered with breathable tarpauline, oil it here and there with Balistol and ride it from time to time, if the weather is good enough to do so without any salt on the streets. That's the way I do. The bike takes care of itself by beeing riden, especially this makes the battery function well over many years better than anything else will do. On drier days take off the tarpauline to free the bike from moisture. Keep the Honda clean after trips, which isn't easy in low temperatures. For both the ride and the cleaning the rider must be toughened.....not everyones business I guess.
Wisedrum
The issue we have around here with non-heated spaces is extreme water condensation with changes in ambient temperature and humidity. Metal gets cold and then the ambient air suddenly warms up and brings in a load of high humidity, which condenses on anything that is colder than the dew point. The only solution is to have a heat source that keeps the bike warmer than the dew point.
With a bike stored in a confined crate, I don't think forced air is necessary. Simply having, for example, a 100W incandescent lamp or two inside would be enough to keep the air temperature inside the crate higher than whatever the ambient air temperature is outside the crate, thus preventing any chance of condensation.
Very interesting points. I'd press the "like" button if there was one. It's very arid in my part of the country -- I've not had the condensation issue here.
(06-20-2017, 12:25 PM)Stichill_imp Wrote: [ -> ]The issue we have around here with non-heated spaces is extreme water condensation with changes in ambient temperature and humidity. Metal gets cold and then the ambient air suddenly warms up and brings in a load of high humidity, which condenses on anything that is colder than the dew point. The only solution is to have a heat source that keeps the bike warmer than the dew point.
With a bike stored in a confined crate, I don't think forced air is necessary. Simply having, for example, a 100W incandescent lamp or two inside would be enough to keep the air temperature inside the crate higher than whatever the ambient air temperature is outside the crate, thus preventing any chance of condensation.
Yes, temperature changes causing moisture is my concern, you explained it nicely. I have thought about an incandescent light but I like moving air idea more. In Illinois we can get extreme temperature swings, from below freezing at night to we'll above 32 in the day.