You will find an electrical heater grid in the HVAC system that gets the heat going way before the engine can make heat.My wife once had a 2012 Mazda3 with the Skyactiv engine. That car has a blue light when your engine is cold and it’s cold outside. My VW GLI makes decent heat in 90 seconds on a cold engine in 11 degree weather that hasn’t been ran in 10 hours. I don’t know how it does it.
Oil temperature is mostly going to matter in the first seconds after the engine is started, when parts of the engine are starved for oil. After that, oil temperature doesn't have too much of an effect on wear until it starts getting too hot.What is a normal operating temperature range for the oil? (Not snark, genuine question - I've asked elsewhere in the past at what oil temperature do we get max protection from the oil - or near max protection - does it have to be all the way up to 180F?)
Depends. If it’s below roughly 35 to 40F or colder it gets ~10-15 minutes purely for my own comfort,
My 1967 Ford LTD had that.My wife once had a 2012 Mazda3 with the Skyactiv engine. That car has a blue light when your engine is cold and it’s cold outside.
Coolant is cycled through the exhaust manifold in the VW.My wife once had a 2012 Mazda3 with the Skyactiv engine. That car has a blue light when your engine is cold and it’s cold outside. My VW GLI makes decent heat in 90 seconds on a cold engine in 11 degree weather that hasn’t been ran in 10 hours. I don’t know how it does it.
Probably the best reply given !If it's above -30° F, I start the engine, put on the seatbelt, and drive gently until the drivetrain is up to temperature. Below that, I might let it idle for 30 seconds before gently driving off.
I knew that the vehicle would be evicted from our stable when we came back from Las Vegas from a Thanksgiving visit to my in-laws in 2019. 15 degrees at Denver airport, car was parked for a week outside. It froze from the inside. My 7-month-old daughter still breastfeeds and wants to eat and cries. I start the car, son under the blanket, wife breestfeeds, but everyone is like shivering. I covered them with my jacket and I had two blankets inside. Sitting, keeping gas pedal to 2,500rpms. She stopped breastfeeding after 20min, and you could barely feel any heat coming out. It took another 10min of driving.More Toyota bashing by @edyvw;but I agree with you on this one brother
. My 2GR-FE goes stone cold after it sits, the heat just simply vanishes. Yesterday it was -17c when I started it, and you could hear the little guy with his hammer on the engine for a while, and in less than 60 seconds, I feathered it out of the neighbourhood. One more thing, the perforated leather seat has been obliterated, I had to get some material to cover it or the sponge would disintegrate; just brutal.
Where did you find that graphic? The wear rate on that one falls of a lot more linearly and quicker than the ones I'm familiar with.Oil temperature is mostly going to matter in the first seconds after the engine is started, when parts of the engine are starved for oil. After that, oil temperature doesn't have too much of an effect on wear until it starts getting too hot.
Coolant temperature is a lot more critical. Below a certain coolant or cylinder liner temperature, piston rings and liners will experience a lot of corrosive wear from combustion byproducts. This stops happening once the coolant is above ~100°F.
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