Totally irrelevant to objects. Only affects us and the rate of cooling.
Totally irrelevant to objects. Only affects us and the rate of cooling.
My Chevy Cruze will only idle for 10 minutes and shuts itself off if not "Started" inside the car. I love the remote start!!You're an anomaly here if you don't have or use remote start. Depending on temp I let mine warm before leaving work anywhere from 10-20 minutes. Yesterday was a 15 minute warm-up and today will be the same with temps around -10. Many people also let them idle for 20-30 minutes when running into the grocery store, etc.
Consider wheel bearings, transmission, etc.... The rest of the car besides the engine.
I hate scraping windows. Just a little forethought and I haven't done it in years. Even if I get a call at a weird hour I just click the timer to "on" and the car is toasty and defrosted by the time I leave.Interesting given your climate. Warm up would be rather quick just driving off even in the "winter". Assuming those helos are turbine I really don't see why that's necessary with immediate hot air on tap.
Yes and no--yes I've seen it start to do that, no I've never driven to the point where I couldn't see properly.Has anyone here experienced the instance where you started up your cold car and drove away and the inside of your windshield fogged up to the point where you couldn't see clearly?
All the time! Well, some days moreseo than others. It probably has something to do with the dew point.Has anyone here experienced the instance where you started up your cold car and drove away and the inside of your windshield fogged up to the point where you couldn't see clearly?
Tell that to my battery when it sat outside for 9 hours at work and cranks slowly at first or the transmission (fluid) when I shifted into R and it took about 3-4 seconds before it engaged. Why do engine block heaters exist ?Totally irrelevant to objects. Only affects us and the rate of cooling.
me too because i think this lessens chance of fuel drops to hit cyl walls., I'll keep the RPMs up to around 2K
happened on my 1999 old gasoline car only. new one is ok.Has anyone here experienced the instance where you started up your cold car and drove away and the inside of your windshield fogged up to the point where you couldn't see clearly?
Those of us who understand why letting a car warm up know what you're talking about. Those that live in Florida, Texas, etc and have zero personal experience with these situations yet try and give their input are the one standing their ground on why it's not necessary.Has anyone here experienced the instance where you started up your cold car and drove away and the inside of your windshield fogged up to the point where you couldn't see clearly?
It's just not that simple.The advice that I remember seeing is that in cold weather you start the car, wait for a few seconds and drive gently until the engine reaches normal operating temperature.
Not following--in the end, all items can't get colder than the -18F in that image, otherwise ambient would be heating up the items, no?Tell that to my battery when it sat outside for 9 hours at work and cranks slowly at first or the transmission (fluid) when I shifted into R and it took about 3-4 seconds before it engaged.
I had a 1977 GMC C15 in the early '80's and I installed a coolant heater into the lower radiator hose.I've been toying with the idea of reducing startup wear by installing coolant pre-heaters. They can be found used on eBay for cheap. These units would allow you to pre-heat the engine without actually running it, use less fuel, and warm the cabin. There are ones that heat your entire coolant circuit and ones that just heat the cabin. I've got a kit in my basement waiting to be installed. More discussion in another thread here.
How? Anything else is overthinking it. I know this is the forum of OCD car care, but the next step after having basic mechanical sympathy (IE not revving to redline when first started) will not have any significant impact on wear. Even if it did, all of that stress won't net any more value when it gets totaled by a texting driver.It's just not that simple.