I noticed that on the last day of the 170 convention this year, when many beautiful 170s were hightailing it out of there to catch a break in the weather, that there was a distinct difference in the startup procedures.
Some pilots very carefully and thoroughly went through pre-flight procedures and let the engine idle at low speed, then went off toward the runway.
But others did quick pre-flights and then revved up the engines and off they went, without much idle time. I have noticed other pilots where we tie down revving engines obviously over minimums also, then taxiing off.
I read in the owners manual that the engine should be idled for a period of time first before taxiing. I read the same thing in owners manuals and textbooks on car maintenance. (I have a car with 230,000 miles on the engine, still going strong. We hope to retire it soon for use only as an airport taxi/car at a nearby airport we fly into regularly.)
So am I wrong about this, or will the engine last longer and be in better shape if the idle times before and after flying are properly observed? This isn't just an idle
