Right -- the Pacific Northwest can be hard on airplanes -- I'm based at Paine Field WA myself. Out of curiosity, what did you find?
During the winter, it's hard to get-up and fly, and sometimes it's 4 to 5-weeks between flights during those dark wet PNW winter months. However, we keep heat in the engine compartment, desiccant plugs in the exhaust stacks (homemade but very effective), change the oil every 25-hours, use Aeroshell 15W-50 oil containing the Lycoming anti-corrosion additive (LW-16702), add AvBlend at every oil change, use MMO in the fuel system and cycle a shop-fan in the hangar when the relative humidity exceeds 80-percent to prevent condensation. And when we run the engine, it's always to normal operating temps and flown for 1 to 2 hours minimum. Been doing this for 22-years ever since completing our RV-9A project in 2004. Engine compression remains in the high 70's, cylinder borescope pictures look great, no metal found in the oil filter or oil sump screen, and the engine still runs like new -- not kidding. We epoxy primered every inside surface during our build, and it was professionally painted with epoxy zinc chromated primer under an Imron paint. So, no airframe corrosion either over that 22-years hangered in the PNW.


View attachment 117238 View attachment 117239