Caframo 9510CABBX Pali 120V Engine Heater

Extend the boating season and protect your engine against surprise cold snaps prior to winterization. The Pali utilizes a self-regulating PTC heating element that cannot overheat. It meets all ignition protection guidelines and standards to allow it to be safely used in the marine engine compartment. It is the only heater of its type fully safety compliant to UL and CSA standards. Omnidirectional Airflow: Air flows in all directions to more evenly distribute warmth throughout the engine compartment. Dual Airflow Redundancy: Twin fans increase the reliability of the Pali, ensuring your engine is protected during a cold snap. Impinged Air Technology: Enables integration of omnidirectional airflow and dual airflow redundancy within a compact design that fits in most engine compartments. Quick Release Bracket included The positive lock bracket mounts to any flat surface. The Pali can be attached easily or removed quickly to store. The Pali utilizes an internal hermetically sealed thermostat to turn the heater on before 41ðF (5ðC) and off before 60ðF (15ðC). Continuously protects engine compartments up to 80 cubic feet at -4ðF (-20ðC) outside ambient temperature. Ignition protected design Safe self-regulated PTC heaters Impinged air technology Dual airflow redundancy Omnidirectional airflow discharge Safe hermetically sealed thermostat Quick release mounting bracket (included) 20′ power cord Automatically activates when the engine compartment temp drops to 41ðF (5ðC)

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Caframo 9510CABBX Pali 120V Engine Heater
Caframo 9510CABBX Pali 120V Engine Heater

An engine or motor is a machine designed to convert one or more forms of energy into mechanical energy.

Available energy sources include potential energy (e.g. energy of the Earth's gravitational field as exploited in hydroelectric power generation), heat energy (e.g. geothermal), chemical energy, electric potential and nuclear energy (from nuclear fission or nuclear fusion). Many of these processes generate heat as an intermediate energy form; thus heat engines have special importance. Some natural processes, such as atmospheric convection cells convert environmental heat into motion (e.g. in the form of rising air currents). Mechanical energy is of particular importance in transportation, but also plays a role in many industrial processes such as cutting, grinding, crushing, and mixing.

Mechanical heat engines convert heat into work via various thermodynamic processes. The internal combustion engine is perhaps the most common example of a mechanical heat engine in which heat from the combustion of a fuel causes rapid pressurisation of the gaseous combustion products in the combustion chamber, causing them to expand and drive a piston, which turns a crankshaft. Unlike internal combustion engines, a reaction engine (such as a jet engine) produces thrust by expelling reaction mass, in accordance with Newton's third law of motion.

Apart from heat engines, electric motors convert electrical energy into mechanical motion, pneumatic motors use compressed air, and clockwork motors in wind-up toys use elastic energy. In biological systems, molecular motors, like myosins in muscles, use chemical energy to create forces and ultimately motion (a chemical engine, but not a heat engine).

Chemical heat engines which employ air (ambient atmospheric gas) as a part of the fuel reaction are regarded as airbreathing engines. Chemical heat engines designed to operate outside of Earth's atmosphere (e.g. rockets, deeply submerged submarines) need to carry an additional fuel component called the oxidizer (although there exist super-oxidizers suitable for use in rockets, such as fluorine, a more powerful oxidant than oxygen itself); or the application needs to obtain heat by non-chemical means, such as by means of nuclear reactions.

Pāli (), also known as Pali-Magadhi, is a Middle Indo-Aryan liturgical language on the Indian subcontinent. It is widely studied because it is the language of the Buddhist Pāli Canon or Tipiṭaka as well as the sacred language of Theravāda Buddhism.

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