Originally Posted By: mechtech2
Originally Posted By: volk06
Why do people think or consider 100F ambient temp is hard on oil? Flows easier in the engine than colder temps. If engines run at 180-210F how can 100F ambient temprature be hard on the oil and be considered severe service?
Easy-peezy:
Because that 100 deg F starting temp means it is just that much warmer at running temps [warmer than 25 deg F ambient temps,let's say]
[Not an insurmountable situation, but a legit reason to note ambient temps as a very real factor ]
That's not been my experience, though. I've lived where it's cold (Vermont, Colorado) and where it's hot (Texas, Mississippi) and the engine operating temp doesn't vary much once the thermostat is open - even running the AC, in stop and go traffic, in a black Trans-Am, on a 100 degree day, the coolant temp stayed right at normal. The only time I got that car to run hot was when I was pushing it really hard on a drive in Big Bend Park, moderate speed, full throttle, 95+ day, it warmed a bit.
Before you say that the gauge was an idiot light, I noticed it run a hair cooler on the gauge once I installed a Hypertech chip and a 180 degree thermostat, so I think it was a real gauge.
So, even though it's hot outside, my cars have always run at the thermostat temp in weather from extreme cold to pretty hot (100) unless I was really pushing them. Normal driving, including idling in traffic with AC on, didn't raise the temp.
Further, on the cars on which I had an oil temp gauge, hot weather did not appreciably change the oil temp. On a -25 degree day in Vermont, the oil temp would run 85C in my Volvo 240 turbo. On a 90+ degree day in NYC traffic, AC on, the same car would run 90-95C oil temp. Only time I got the oil warmer was by running it hard (lots of full-throttle boost), and even then, I never saw over 110C.
So, my experience is that coolant temp and oil temp are not that affected by outside air temp. It's less affected than people think.
Steve has expressed it as a matter of heat transfer, and he's right. If the car in question has a good cooling system, it will transfer enough heat at 100F to run the same temp. The only time I've seen an oil temp or coolant temp rise was when I was putting a LOT of heat into the cooling system in the form of full throttle driving. Regular highway driving, or idling in traffic does not generate the heat load that full throttle does.
A car with a properly functioning cooling system will run at the thermostat temp over a wide range of ambient temps. The oil temp will follow the coolant temp closely.
Originally Posted By: volk06
Why do people think or consider 100F ambient temp is hard on oil? Flows easier in the engine than colder temps. If engines run at 180-210F how can 100F ambient temprature be hard on the oil and be considered severe service?
Easy-peezy:
Because that 100 deg F starting temp means it is just that much warmer at running temps [warmer than 25 deg F ambient temps,let's say]
[Not an insurmountable situation, but a legit reason to note ambient temps as a very real factor ]
That's not been my experience, though. I've lived where it's cold (Vermont, Colorado) and where it's hot (Texas, Mississippi) and the engine operating temp doesn't vary much once the thermostat is open - even running the AC, in stop and go traffic, in a black Trans-Am, on a 100 degree day, the coolant temp stayed right at normal. The only time I got that car to run hot was when I was pushing it really hard on a drive in Big Bend Park, moderate speed, full throttle, 95+ day, it warmed a bit.
Before you say that the gauge was an idiot light, I noticed it run a hair cooler on the gauge once I installed a Hypertech chip and a 180 degree thermostat, so I think it was a real gauge.
So, even though it's hot outside, my cars have always run at the thermostat temp in weather from extreme cold to pretty hot (100) unless I was really pushing them. Normal driving, including idling in traffic with AC on, didn't raise the temp.
Further, on the cars on which I had an oil temp gauge, hot weather did not appreciably change the oil temp. On a -25 degree day in Vermont, the oil temp would run 85C in my Volvo 240 turbo. On a 90+ degree day in NYC traffic, AC on, the same car would run 90-95C oil temp. Only time I got the oil warmer was by running it hard (lots of full-throttle boost), and even then, I never saw over 110C.
So, my experience is that coolant temp and oil temp are not that affected by outside air temp. It's less affected than people think.
Steve has expressed it as a matter of heat transfer, and he's right. If the car in question has a good cooling system, it will transfer enough heat at 100F to run the same temp. The only time I've seen an oil temp or coolant temp rise was when I was putting a LOT of heat into the cooling system in the form of full throttle driving. Regular highway driving, or idling in traffic does not generate the heat load that full throttle does.
A car with a properly functioning cooling system will run at the thermostat temp over a wide range of ambient temps. The oil temp will follow the coolant temp closely.
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