quote:
Originally posted by jmacmaster:
Lets take the mid-point of that 200-1,000 miles of wear per start up, which is 600 miles, and assume that you get the "wear-equivalent" of driving 600 miles with each cold start.
Then lets assume two cold starts per day (which I think is conservative for the average driver) over the period of a year, which equals 730 cold starts for the year.
Then multiply the 730 cold starts by 600 miles of wear. You get 438,000 miles. So the cold starts for that year caused as much engine wear as driving the car for 438,000 miles would have caused. So any new car's engine would be worn out long before the end of its first year.
This is patently absurd. I think that the amount of engine wear caused by cold starts is vastly overestimated.
Well...math isn't your strong point I presume?
Seriously, you make the mistake of equating start-up wear miles as defined above with actual miles on a typical vehicle.
Recall that startup-wear miles are normalized to the wear rate with fresh oil at steady highway speeds. This means that the average engine, with average maintenance, in the average climate starts out with approximately 2 millions miles of life. Toyotas probably start off with 3-4 million miles.
Also, one has to define what worn out means. A worn out engine may still run, but one or more of the engine specifications are out of spec. This could be one or more of the following: bearing clearances, piston/ring clearances, bore taper, leakdown rate, chain stretch, etc, etc.
Your example above still gives you 5 years of starting a
cold engine and running it up to temperature twice a day, everyday, before something is out of spec. And if you drove for 10 miles each start, 36,500 miles would be on the odometer.
I would say that average BITOGER is in the 200 miles of wear per start up range. And many are probably closer to the 100 miles of wear per start up range.
[ August 29, 2006, 12:25 AM: Message edited by: 427Z06 ]