If you’ve got a heated pitot tube, it probably came with aluminum tubes for pitot and AoA installed into the body, and they were probably a foot or more long. At some point, you probably want to transition from the metal one to nylon, poly, or silicone tube, just because it’s easier to work with. But…you wonder how hot the metal lines get and if you want to shorten them how short can they be and not melt your lines! I’m doing the pitot tube on the F1 Rocket project right now, and am planning to use tiny (1/8” OD) silicon tubing from the pitot to the wing root because it is light and easy to route. My pitot tube is a Piper blade with AN fittings screwed into the root, and brand new heating elements. I bent up some metal lines that fit my installation, and wanted to know where the transition can occur. Silicone tube is good for about 480 degrees F.
I powered up the pitot tube with my big 12 volt supply and set it up on the welding table, then let it reach steady state. Measuring temperature with a probe on my multimeter, the body of the blade stabilized at 500 degrees F. The bottom of the casting (where the AN fitting was located) was 334 degrees, the line 4” away was 178 degrees F, and the line temp at 9” was 126 degrees. this tells me that I COULD install the silicone right at the base….but I think I‘ll do it 4” away just to add margin and not take a chance on degrading the line after years of use. Note that I rarely use pitot heat unless I am operating in the clouds, and that is rare these days (I live in the desert).
Pictures to prove it happened….




I powered up the pitot tube with my big 12 volt supply and set it up on the welding table, then let it reach steady state. Measuring temperature with a probe on my multimeter, the body of the blade stabilized at 500 degrees F. The bottom of the casting (where the AN fitting was located) was 334 degrees, the line 4” away was 178 degrees F, and the line temp at 9” was 126 degrees. this tells me that I COULD install the silicone right at the base….but I think I‘ll do it 4” away just to add margin and not take a chance on degrading the line after years of use. Note that I rarely use pitot heat unless I am operating in the clouds, and that is rare these days (I live in the desert).
Pictures to prove it happened….



