Did I imagen an oil warmer that slides down an oil dipstick hole? Its plugged into 110 over night and keeps the oil nice and warm for cold starts.... IF not. we should damn sure invent one.Despite being here in OK for awhile now, I've not had to deal with starting my car much at sub-freezing temps. I've had a heated garage most of that time, and just now dealing with these conditions. I drive a 20+ yr old 6-cylinder Chrysler. I know gentle driving is the best way to warm up the engine, but damn...I can be at work in less time than it takes to defrost the windshield. Seriously, with no precipitation, just normal jack frost, it hardly seems worth it to warm up my van for more time than to get the oil pan dispersed and the idle smooth (Especially at 0400) That's def gonna change momentarily when the ice starts falling out of the sky though.
If I wanna warm up my car to be ready to drive, what is appropriate and safe? Assuming that my fluid levels are all correct, and I'm not parked on grass...
I disagree. It takes a long time for oil to come to operating temp. Watch the oil pressure gauge. The pressure will be significantly higher when it’s cold.Antifreeze gets warm from dissipating the engine heat. AF isn't getting warm before the oil. I just don't see much benefit to longer idling other than comfort in the cab and melting window frost/ice.
I disagree. It takes a long time for oil to come to operating temp. Watch the oil pressure gauge. The pressure will be significantly higher when it’s cold.
...until it gets wet, decomposes and plugs the radiator...Card board over the radiator if there's access, does wonders both while sitting and driving, gas or diesel.
Obviously the oil pressure is higher on cold engine/oil vs warm. Cold weather viscosity and tolerances are what we're talking about here. My point is that the antifreeze has nothing to do with actually heating the engine to operating temp. It will prevent the engine from exceeding operating temp as part of a functioning cooling system, but thats it.I disagree. It takes a long time for oil to come to operating temp. Watch the oil pressure gauge. The pressure will be significantly higher when it’s cold.
...until it gets wet, decomposes and plugs the radiator...
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