There are two basic styles of cylinder preheat, glow plugs and intake heaters. Some use a combination of both. Preheat systems can be either manually or automatically controlled.
Manual systems such as those found on older equipment usually have a combination preheat switch that you manually hold to that position to energise the heaters and then turn to another position to crank the engine. Some operators will go back to the preheat position once the engine starts and give it some more heat if the engine has cold cylinders that are missing and use the preheat until it is firing on all holes.
Engines equipped with auto systems will usually crank regardless of whether the glow plugs are on or not. Most of these systems will continue to cycle the glow plugs or intake heaters after the engine is running dependent on sensor status.
Intake heaters are not a new thing. I have an early 60's vintage Cockshutt tractor that has a Waukesha Diesel in it that is equipped with an intake heater.
None of the 2-cycle Detroits regardless of displacement or cylinder size were equipped with glow plugs and I have never seen one fitted with an Intake heater but they may exist somewhere. They utilise other means of heating the engine so that it will have a warm air charge to help starting. Methods that I have seen are electrical, diesel or fuel gas heaters that heat jacket water. Some are fittted with ether injection systems to help with starting.
Some fellows use a hook up that allows them to connect their pickup to the cooling system on the piece of equipment with quick couplers and heat the equipment engine that way. Most have quit doing this as they were cracking pickup blocks because of teh thermal shock caused by the cold water.
If it gets real nippley sometimes all you can do is pull a parachute over the piece of equipment and use a Herman Nelson to thaw it out and get it started.
http://www.herman-nelson.com/