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dr_xenon t1_iuqxwvd wrote

I’m guessing that’s subzero in Celsius, not Fahrenheit. Big difference between the two and how it affects vehicles.

In freezing conditions an electric block heater would help quite a bit. A diesel without a block heater may not start at all if it’s cold enough.

And 30 minutes of preheating is ridiculous. 5-10 minutes is enough to get the fluids warmed up.

109

tmwagner77 t1_iur7hw2 wrote

Umm, there are parts of the US that regularly go subzero too. In Farenheit.

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TheLastForestOnEarth t1_iuro4os wrote

Yes but the title is most likely refering to metric because they used km. Also 0°F is not a very important specific temperature, while 0°C is a very important temperature.

27

Diligent_Nature t1_iurzqo9 wrote

> while 0°C is a very important temperature.

Only for water. Cars use antifreeze which, by itself, freezes at 0°F, but mixed properly with water it freezes at -40° (F or C).

−16

TheLastForestOnEarth t1_iurzy9r wrote

I was refering to the concept of "subzero", which is used a lot in metric countries, but I can't imagine it being that useful in you operate in F.

Wasn't refering to the relevance of 0°C to vehicles.

10

Diligent_Nature t1_ius186i wrote

"Subzero" temperatures are common in the northern US.

−9

[deleted] t1_iut88u5 wrote

That... Doesnt matter?

"Sub zero" is a reference in C. Just because you can aply to any referencial that goes bellow 0 it doesnt really matter.

8

Salesman89 t1_iutg4zk wrote

But, we say "subfreezing." Your meteorologist likes to say sub zero in the US because he's a cool MK character. There's really no other reason.

I don't care what your car has inside it. 2/3rds of the rock it rolls on is water. Problems will arrise if you drop below the freezing point of water, for your car, your home, your health...

2

N00L99999 t1_iusal3w wrote

> Only for water.

Not just for water. Subzero Celsius means rain turns into snow, and also that windscreens start freezing, thus requiring pre-heating to de-ice it.

5

girhen t1_iuskwxy wrote

>Not just for water. Subzero Celsius means rain turns into snow, and also that windscreens start freezing, thus requiring pre-heating to de-ice it.

That's because rain and snow are... water.

Not arguing that his comment fighting over 0C being important only for water isn't silly because there's a lot more water in your car than just coolant (vapor, ice, snow, etc affect more than just driving conditions), but pointing out rain vs snow is still just talking about water.

1

N00L99999 t1_iuslthw wrote

Of course.

But the comment I was replying to also mentionned to use “antifreeze” to avoid pre-heating, as if the problem with pre-heating was liquids.

It’s not.

The problem is the snow, which starts at 0 Celsius.

1

girhen t1_iuso6wn wrote

I mean, that's fine. The way you said it didn't make much logical sense to me.

I'd have told him that it's not about the engine's water freezing (or not), but rather about warming the engine to deal with the environmental effects of freezing water and general cold. Defrost the ice on the windows, stop fogging windows, and the fact that most humans aren't happy in freezing temperatures. Skip the part that reads like it's not about water freezing, but that it's about water freezing.

3

Fearlessleader85 t1_iut4wjl wrote

That's also not correct. It can sleet or snow significantly above 0⁰C. Hail pretty much ONLY occurs well above 0⁰C. The coldest day I've seen hail on was in the high 30s F, the warmest I've seen it was around 80⁰F.

In dry air, pooled water can start freezing around 40⁰F fairly easily. In REALLY dry air, drops can freeze way above that.

It depends on relative humidity as well as dry bulb temp.

Edit: is actually dropping a mixture of rain, sleet, and hail outside my window right now at 39⁰F.

1

alnyland t1_ius4kp8 wrote

Was gonna say, but I also live in a weird part of the country (4-5hrs from the four corners). Today it was 12°F when I woke up, and in January it is rare for me to start the car when it’s over -10°F. My car is very heat efficient so it takes longer but 10mins is fine, my shifter will wake up soon enough.

1

Etiennera t1_iuqy4m0 wrote

Gas cars will also not start given sufficient cold

11

Mark_Logan t1_iurb82e wrote

While they do become harder to start, most modern gas cars will start in extreme cold weather (Below -40c/f) without block heaters, so long as the battery is in good condition.

Diesel vehicles suffer more because of the incredibly high compression that the starter has to overcome, in addition to the environmental factors that effect both vehicles the same.

In my youth, I lived in the far north of Canada and I remember having to put an insulated tarp over the front of the truck and running a tiger torch under the truck for 15 minutes to get things warmed up. You did this if the truck cranked but didn’t fire. You didn’t want to grind down the battery too much. We couldn’t plug the truck’s block heater in while on the ice road, off the grid. It worked like a charm. Craziest part was when you disconnected the torch from the propane tank, I remember seeing liquid droplets of propane flow out onto the ice before boiling off in the frigid air.

7

Kenbishi t1_iur7ncb wrote

Managed to successfully start my car in -73F weather when I was in high school. Thankfully the cold snap only lasted a couple of weeks.

Car had a battery pad and battery blanket, oil pan heater, and a heating/circulation pump. These days I use a trickle charger in place of a battery blanket or battery pad.

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tallulahQ t1_iuralo2 wrote

-73F! Where were you if you don’t mind me asking. Canada? Does that include windchill? It got down to -35F during the polar vortex in 2019, but it was considered pretty dangerous and we were all told to remain indoors, whole city got off work and everything.

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Kenbishi t1_iut6jot wrote

Interior Alaska. There was zero wind. We were suffering from an inversion at the time so all of the moisture from the vehicle exhaust and wood smoke from wood stoves was collecting in the valley as ice fog, and it was so dense you could barely see to drive (plus it reflected headlights back at you worse than regular fog).

They didn’t close schools due to the temperature, but only closed them because of the number of bus accidents occurring on the roads due to poor visibility because of the ice fog. I don’t know if things have changed, but they didn’t even have a provision for closing schools at the time because of the temperature.

5

tallulahQ t1_iuucz51 wrote

Oh wow. Yeah I know what you mean about the temperature causing school closures, it’s common now but it didn’t used to be a thing. That’s crazy though! Especially if people had had to go outside after those accidents. -70F puts you at extreme danger of frostbite within minutes (although perhaps less so if zero wind? Not sure, just my guess).

1

colem5000 t1_iusjp3x wrote

Yes that has to include the windchill unless they are in alaska or northern Canada. I live in northern Canada and the coldest I have seen is -50c without the wind

2

gathermewool t1_iurbrww wrote

That is…literally true, but it’s practically not an issue for most people with well-maintained vehicles.

I’ve started every vehicle I’ve ever had, one with over 200k miles it (with a good battery),in sub-zero Fahrenheit at least once without issue. The oldest was a Subaru with the short piston skirt design, so it made an awful lot of noise, but there was never an issue actually starting.

1

phdoofus t1_iusgm17 wrote

It'll likely start, but it if the coolant is all frozen solid......

1

gathermewool t1_iurb182 wrote

5-10 minutes of gently DRIVING will get the fluids warmed up. There is no need to idle to warm a vehicle up in most cases. Besides, the only real way to warm up some parts of the drive train is to drive. The only practical benefit is for the driver’s comfort.

6

Broad-Kangaroo-2267 t1_iurky1y wrote

The cab also needs to be warm enough to prevent the windows from fogging/icing up.

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gathermewool t1_iurtexd wrote

True. Definitely a consideration I wasn’t thinking about. In my climate it’s usually very dry during very cold days, so fog isn’t an issue. Even on moister, warmer days the defrost setting will still pump out dry air and keep the windshield clear. It’s COLD, dry air, but the cold doesn’t bother me.

You’re right, though. If I turn on the defroster setting and the windshield doesn’t clear up I’m forced to wait.

2

rymep t1_iurrr2y wrote

This can be mitigated with proper cleaning.

−5

colem5000 t1_iusjzii wrote

The engine has to warm up. And driving isn’t the best way to do that. Oil gets very thick in really cold temps and doesn’t lubricate properly. Your car might start and run but your probably doing damage to you engine.

−2

gathermewool t1_iusq74y wrote

The best way to warm up an engine is while under gentle load.

Even if you don’t use top-tier boutique synthetics, any modern API-rated oil will properly lubricate the engine for the vast majority of us. If you live somewhere really cold, where it gets we’ll below zero Fahrenheit, an easy solution is to use a full synthetic, meaning at least a good Group 3 oil, 0W-XX oil.

An oil’s pour point isn’t a great indicator of whether an oil will pump adequately upon startup, but it does show you that even a decent synthetic like Mobil 1 10W-XX oil will still pour at -39C. They offer other synthetics that are down in the -50s C.

Sitting there idling your engine to warmup also prolongs the time it takes for the oil’s viscosity to reach the point where wear is minimized. Regardless, at the temperature most of us experience during the winter (positive degrees Fahrenheit), the wear on your engine will likely not matter in a practical sense. Lubrication IS happening. The thought that you’re running your cold engine dry for some period of time is simply not true.

Anecdote: we get into the negative teens Fahrenheit for at least a few days each winter where I am most winters. Even still, my oil pressure light goes out nearly as quickly as when it’s warm out. The oil pump does have a bypass, which will open when the oil is very cold and thick; however, the pump is positive displacement and an adequate amount of oil will pump to the supply channels almost instantly. That’s. It even to mention the leftover film of oil and boundary layer of additive protection left on the bearing surfaces.

4

colem5000 t1_iusrhlf wrote

Ok you start your engine at -40 then drive it instantly and see how long you engine last. While your driving your running at a much higher RPM then idling. All that extra wear will cause premature engine issues. You do what ever you want. I will continue to warm up my engine before I put them under load.

−1

gathermewool t1_iusz5cb wrote

You’re talking things way out of context and exaggerating the risk. Much higher RPM? Most cars cold idle at 2K RPM as is. I’m advocating driving off gently, not starting up at low temps and gunning it immediately onto the highway. Besides, I’d argue that overloading an excessively cold engine is more likely to result in catastrophic failure such as a cracked head, blown gasket or spun bearing. Who cares about wear at that point?

Also, did I even mention doing this at negative 40? I was pretty clearly stating that most of us start and drive our vehicles at temperatures at which the oil is immediately properly lubricating the engine, far from the limit of the oil. On the flip side, just as your example of loading up an engine at negative 40 is absurd, so to is warming up your engine by idling at, say, 0C.

Most of us, including me, never even see close to -40 where I am. As mentioned, I RARELY see below zero and never below the negative teens Fahrenheit, which I think is pretty common. Under these circumstances, starting up and driving off gently is the best thing to do.

As mentioned before, the only way to warm up the rest of the drivetrain is by driving. I think that’s neglected, and some who warm up their engines have no problem loading up the rest of their bone-cold drivetrain. If you do idle your engine to warm it up, I hope you at least still drive gently for a bit to warm up the rest of the car.

I get it, though, it’s human nature to want to take care of things that are so important to us and cost so much money. But, just because you think your engine is as cold, brittle and sensitive as you feel doesn’t make it actually so.

Finally, I don’t begrudge anyone who wants to warm their car up for personal comfort. I think it’s wasteful and polluting, but we all do things in our lives that pollute and we can improve on, so who am I to give someone a hard time. If the conversation comes up, however, I will make it known that warming up an engine for the engine’s sake before taking off is all for their peace of mind only the majority of the time.

2

colem5000 t1_iut31ii wrote

Who warms their vehicle up when it isn’t negative temps? That is a complete waste of time and gas. Well where I live it gets to minus 40 every year and averages around -20 all winter. That’s what warming up an engine means to me, not at plus 2. So yes I guess your right at the temps your talking about it’s fine to drive to warm up your vehicle but not in the winters where I live.

−2

Maximum_Poet_8661 t1_iur6rvp wrote

it depends on how cold and wet it is tbh, if it's freezing outside and there's ice all over every window I'll probably let it warm for 10-15 minutes minimum so it's easier to scrape off all the ice. If there's no ice on the car I don't care though, I'll just let it warm for 3-5 min if it's extremely cold or just get up and go if it's only moderately cold

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gathermewool t1_iurc12e wrote

Good point. The only time I idle to warm up is while clearing ice and snow off the car. The heater may not put out a ton of heat, but the rear defroster (and front in my vehicles) will get the melting started while I work on the rest of the vehicle.

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[deleted] t1_iurdx9h wrote

[deleted]

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ridethe907 t1_iutl7oi wrote

The block heater in a diesel heats the coolant in the engine block, which in turn keeps the oil and fuel in the engine warm, but it does nothing for the fuel in the tank. Anywhere that gets a real winter switches the type of diesel you get at the pump for the winter season so that gelling is not a concern.

5

[deleted] t1_iutmgvs wrote

[deleted]

−3

ridethe907 t1_iutnaxa wrote

Maybe in some trucks, probably semis. DEF tanks in modern consumer trucks are heated too, but not by the block heater, and that stuff will freeze solid if it's cold enough. In your typical 2500-3500 series pickup the fuel in the tank will be heated when the truck is running, but by hot fuel recirculating from the return line, not an electric heater. If we're talking about plugging in your average normal person diesel car or truck, the only thing being heated is the block. Some people add additional heating pads to things like the battery, and oil and trans pans. I've never heard of anyone putting a pad on a fuel tank.

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SpaceAgePotatoCakes t1_iuug2e6 wrote

I swapped the tank in my diesel Grand Cherokee, there absolutely wasn't a heater in it. It wasn't super happy about it but it started at -35°C.

1

dasus t1_iustjt4 wrote

"But it's still cold in the car after a few minutes, I need to be toasty for my 10 minute drive."

3

Plane_Chance863 t1_iurtllt wrote

Heh, people in my neck of the woods don't care about the fluids, they care about the inside temp of the car...

2

fwubglubbel t1_iurys5j wrote

>I’m guessing that’s subzero in Celsius

Check the source.

1

ramriot t1_iuux1nq wrote

So, last winter I left my car outside overnight & then idling for 25minutes in -35°C, it was not warmed up even then & was not safe to drive.

1

Fuck_You_Alls t1_iurkir6 wrote

Ya try driving in -38F weather only letting your car warm up for 5 to 10 minutes. Its so cold my fluids never really thaw out.

0

bufordt t1_iuryx6m wrote

I did it at least a few times a year when I lived in Fargo, ND. Just drive easy until the engine is warmer. The engine warms up faster when you're driving than it does idling in the driveway.

1

colem5000 t1_iusk7rg wrote

And is hard on your engine. It’s not being lubricated properly. You’re doing damage to your motor.

0

bufordt t1_iusmxqz wrote

A lot of what I've read says it's harder on your engine to idle when it's cold than to drive easy. In part because the lubrication gets spread around sooner.

Edit: And let's make sure we're talking about the same thing. I'm talking start your engine, and then start driving normally within 30-60 seconds, vs starting your engine and letting it idle for 10-20 minutes.

>most modern cars are able to successfully circulate oil within 20-30 seconds

2

colem5000 t1_iuspshe wrote

Not when it’s cold. Oil doesn’t pump properly when it’s thick. Even when your driving easy your RPM are still well above idle RPM. I don’t know where you’re reading that from but as a mechanic I can assure you that it’s wrong. With the oil technology further advancing it getting better but it’s still hard on engines.

1

bufordt t1_iutq2im wrote

You'll have to forgive me if I believe the experts at the car manufacturers, Liqui Moly, Shell, and Esso over a random "mechanic" on Reddit.

From Consumer Reports:

>Modern cars have improved on technology to the point that your engine is fully lubricated within 20 to 30 seconds. By the time you get in, start the car, put on your seatbelt, and get situated, the engine might not be fully warm, but it’s completely lubricated and you’re okay to drive at this point.

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dr_xenon t1_iurln3m wrote

-38F is an extreme situation. At 0F 5-10 min is enough.

At -38F I might not shut it off at all.

0

H4wkeye47 t1_iur5kfh wrote

The fluids may be “warm” but you also need to wait for the engine block to heat up. Metal contracts when it’s cold and forms a tighter grip around the pistons causing excessive wear in the cylinders if you don’t let the engine block get nice and warm.

Block heaters for the cold are the best option.

−4

gathermewool t1_iurcsis wrote

The pistons contract, too. The combustion will also act in the piston and piston rings pretty much evenly, tending to center the piston in the cylinder. The layer of oil the piston rings ride on in the cylinder cross-hatch will also mitigate wear, even at low temps. The main concern might be that the piston contracts more than the cylinder, so some additional fuel dilution and bypass may occur, requiring a more-frequent oil change in the winter.

Also, the longer the engine is maintains at reduced temperatures the more wear there will be. Idling to warm an engine up takes a lot longer than gently driving off. While driving at low loads, I would argue that you’re actually reducing wear compared to excessively idling to warm up all the time.

Practically speaking, driving off gently soon after starting the engine is the second best option. The first is an external source of heat, which is the point of the article, if I’m not mistaken.

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tkenben t1_iurg6qv wrote

I've read a few books on taking care of older cars, though I imagine the same holds for modern vehicles. They all say, all things being equal, it is better to put the engine under light load than to run it stand still to warm up.

3

Iodine129 t1_iur7tlx wrote

The article is not about pre-heating the car with its own engine before starting driving. That is allowed for two minutes in Finland, likely based on some EU regulation. The article is about small aftermarket heaters that use gasoline or diesel to heat an engine like an electric block heater heats the engine. Those are well abundant in the Nordics especially in diesel-fueled vehicles.

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projecthouse t1_iusi6wj wrote

Thanks for the clarification.

I was wondering how idling your engine for 30 minutes produced as much carbon as DRIVING for 90 minutes.

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Rhenic t1_iuty56f wrote

Even to that sounds counterintuitive, it's not impossible!

First off; It's about particulate emissions, not carbon. Incomplete/inefficient combustion produces much more particulate (think of a fire smoking badly when it's not getting enough oxygen, the smoke consists of particulate).

Engines tend to produce much more particulate as well when not running without a proper load, at an efficient RPM, just like a badly burning fire.

Then the devices that are tasked with catching and nullifying that particulate (like the catalytic converter), can also potentially rely on sufficient pressure (and thus RPM/load), to function properly.

And then to finish that; A modern car uses about 0.5l/hour to idle. A modern diesel would use about 0.75l to 1.0l of fuel to drive 20km (which would take 15 minutes at 80km/h, against the 30 minutes of idling).

So with about 50% to 100% more fuel used, but burned much less efficiently (because no load, inefficient RPM, no turbo pressure); It's not at all unlikely for a car to emit more particulate emissions in 30minutes of idling, than in 15 minutes of driving at an efficient speed.

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-YELDAH t1_iuv874w wrote

This wasn't an essay but ok

You basically proved more = more

−5

FingerTheCat t1_iusah71 wrote

Two minutes of preheating your car before it's illegal? So idling is illegal?

−2

403Verboten t1_iusf5x5 wrote

Yes in a lot of places. It's illegal for trucks to idle in NYC and Europe has regulations around idling. This of course does not apply to sitting at a traffic light although they are making auto start/stop mandatory in newer cars at some point I believe.

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[deleted] t1_iusv23c wrote

[removed]

−14

Rainstorme t1_iuszfj9 wrote

Considering we're talking about a study analyzing an entire market that has sprung up from the law, I'd say the people subject to it consider it a bit more enforceable than you do.

12

bboibrandon t1_iut8sd0 wrote

I'm sensing major authoritarian vibes from you , and people like you

−15

perec1111 t1_iutrtiq wrote

It’s ok. People are often afraid when they see something new.

6

bboibrandon t1_ivwlvjp wrote

I don't expect redditors to understand anything anymore

1

403Verboten t1_iutcz82 wrote

If you mean the NYC law it's super enforcable. If you see a truck idling in NYC and record evidence of it and it gets ticketed, you share in a percentage of the ticket revenue. So it get regularly enforced. I don't agree with having people rat on each other but money is a very powerful motivator.

9

Act-Math-Prof t1_iuug09i wrote

I lived in an apartment in the downtown of a small town. Semis used to idle outside my building for 1/2 hour while waiting to unload stuff for the stores on the first floor. The fumes and the noise were terrible. If it were illegal, I definitely would have turned them in, even if there was no cash involved.

4

Mossad_CIA_Shill t1_iuqy8uf wrote

Making plug in engine heaters mandatory in colder climates would help mitigate this.

https://www.vvkb.com/heaters-application/car-heater/car-engine-heater/

13

Lovv t1_iur8jbm wrote

Doesn't solve frost on the window tho

−4

H_Rix t1_iur9grv wrote

Electric, gasoline or diesel interior heaters are a thing, and super common in nordics.

6

gathermewool t1_iurdiiq wrote

Yes it does. If the block is heated, the coolant is heated. Turn the car on and you don’t have to wait for the initial bit of heat to help with melting the frost. You’re not going to have 100C heat, but it may be sufficiently above freezing to help. Even if the heater isn’t on long enough to provide enough heat to melt the ice, you’re closer and will spend less time idling to get there than if you didn’t have a heater.

1

Lovv t1_iurgfib wrote

Agreed that this would shave some time off -

But for me it takes significantly longer to heat my interior than it does to start the engine.

So you might shave off 30 seconds or so of pre heat but it still would take a good 10 mins to warm up the car and by that time the engine is ready to go anyway.

My point being is that if you're going to take 10-15 mins to warm up the car and thaw the windshield does it really matter to preheat the engine and shave 1 or 2 minutes off the time to heat the interior.

The only way I'd see it working is to install an interior heater in parallel with the engine heater and imo it's kind of sketchy to have an electric element in your car while unattended.

I guess you would have to consider the extra cost for carrying around the extra weight from the two components in the car as well.

0

gathermewool t1_iurqilg wrote

I’m not personally concerned with interior temps. The practical benefit to having a preheated block, to me, would be three fold mostly:

  1. Lower fuel costs/emissions
  2. Lower engine wear
  3. Helping on the rare days I need to de-ice the windshield.

Even on days where it’s well below freezing and I need to drive for a decent distance I usually leave the heat off until the coolant reaches operating temp. I honestly don’t like the warm, dry air blowing on me when I’m already bundled up and comfortable. Even when the fam is in the car I do this. The kids are bundled up just like me and usually have their own blanket to keep them nice and cozy.

Heating up the interior is only something I’m concerned about on long trips. Eventually then cold will creep into my feet or I’ll want to take my gloves and scarf off to get more comfortable, but that’s always well after the coolant is up to temp anyway.

/

I bought electric block heaters for both of our vehicles, but then things worked out for us and we moved to a house with a garage. It never gets much colder than freezing, since it’s attached, so I haven’t felt the need to install them. There would obviously still be some benefit, but it’s not as pressing of a concern now. I’ll likely install them when I do the first coolant exchange. They install in the block drains, so it’s s bit of a job, too.

1

Lovv t1_iuruhat wrote

I have a garage but I do not use it as there is a lot of salt use where I live. Salt and water are much worse for your care than salt and ice.

Anywho thanks for the discussion.

1

happyscrappy t1_ius3bz7 wrote

Ice melts too slowly regardless. Get a scraper for the ice/frost.

−1

gathermewool t1_iusnamw wrote

I mentioned it somewhere else, but I only run the engine to de-ice when it’s substantial. That doesn’t occur often.

1

c0ldgurl t1_iurbcx2 wrote

A box of baking soda in the car does tho.

0

shadowkiller t1_iusdqtj wrote

I've never heard of using baking soda for that before. Is it just acting as a desiccant?

1

c0ldgurl t1_iuw00o4 wrote

Yep. Learned this trick from a friend that lives in Jackson, WY.

1

[deleted] t1_iur0g8p wrote

[removed]

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evident_lee t1_iurb8kw wrote

Meanwhile I watch people every day just sit in their cars idling waiting for kids at school or practices and to have lunch and not be around other people. These wasted idling hours equal out to millions of gallons of gas every day.

5

Illustrious-Fig-516 t1_iur740v wrote

I never preheat my car, I turn it on scrape off the windshield and back glass, then hop in, maybe 5min of heat tops. It's definitely not about emissions, but about time tbh.

4

colem5000 t1_iuskigi wrote

You’re going to wreck your engine. Oil is very thick as cold temps and it doesn’t lubricate properly because it can’t be pumped as efficiently. Wait the extra 10-15 minutes unless you like replacing engines.

−6

SunglassesDan t1_iustb09 wrote

There is no evidence that driving a car for 10 minutes to finish warming up is more harmful than idling it for the same amount of time.

8

Scuzmak t1_iur8oy2 wrote

Block heaters can help both ease of starting and reduce the amount of idling required to get an engine closer to operating temperature (closed loop), where Open Loop is the period where emissions are highest due to richer than stoichiometric Air:Fuel ratios.

4

slam525i t1_iuqy4qv wrote

These are for specialized auxillary preheaters, not for normal car idling.

3

nilsmf t1_iuqzk2z wrote

I would guess the study is on fuel-driven pre-heaters, not pre-heaters driven by mains electricity.

3

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1

CycleKR1 t1_iur7jqb wrote

It is also one of the worst things you can do to an engine. The warm up mode will contribute to fuel washing where the gas that is not being wholly burned during combustion will wash away some of the oil barrier in the cylinders and can cause long term damage. Not good for Catalytic converters either.

1

Caladbolg2 t1_iur7pdr wrote

Yea, preheat the cat. We can put heat tracer on lines to spigots in our homes to keep them from bursting in the winter but automotive companies can’t put something similar on a catalytic converter to get it past it’s activation energy?

Please…

1

happyscrappy t1_ius3vrv wrote

This article is not about engines idling. it is about specialized fuel-burning heaters sold in Nordic countries. They do not have cats.

Car companies already know how to get cats to heat up quickly. They use precats. Using electricity to heat the cat would seem like a bad idea when it's really cold, as the battery is already heavily loaded and operating at reduced capacity. Some people actually put heat blankets (mats) on their battery to warm it to get around the reduced capacity thing.

1

Caladbolg2 t1_iuutqjm wrote

You...are correct. I shouldn't be posting at that hour.

1

jerflash t1_iur9jws wrote

I’m gonna continue to use the remote start in my truck until electric everything is cheap and everywhere…. Sucks but how it’s gotta be

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BuyNo4013 t1_iurautd wrote

Don’t fall for the hoax.

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Whyamievenhear t1_iurkloh wrote

Who's preheating for half an hour!? 5 minutes is enough.

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bluehunger t1_ius84o3 wrote

Who cares? Our Energy Secretary uses his private plane at least 3 times a week at 1000s x more fuel and pollution. He doesn't care but we should? No, it goes both ways

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Jvmowscl t1_iushahz wrote

Not on my lawn, not from my car, maybe some power plant somewhere in the world, still feeling good about myself.

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wee-willie-winkie t1_iuu99ui wrote

No-one preheats their car for 30-minutes. Even 5 mins is an eternity

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CO_PC_Parts t1_iuupvq8 wrote

I grew up where we plugged our cars in at night. Even on the coldest day with the shittiest defroster I don’t think I ever let my car run for more than 15 min.

On most cars back then you could hear your engine idle down and it was good to go.

The worst days you had to go start your car at lunch so it would start again at the end of school/work.

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36-3 t1_iuv9gpr wrote

There are electric heating devices for your car in frigid weather. Problem solved.

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[deleted] t1_iur5pu5 wrote

[removed]

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nuggetsformetoeat t1_iur7dej wrote

I only let mine warm until the windows are done defrosting. Can’t drive if I can’t see. Beyond that I can handle 5 minutes of being a little cold.

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tmwagner77 t1_iur7cth wrote

Personally, I would just put my car in the garage. And partially heat the garage. Keep temps above freezing in it, that is.

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gathermewool t1_iure03n wrote

But then you have issues with accelerated corrosion from salt and moisture, at least in many norther parts of the US. The lower the temp the lower the corrosion rate. Also, if you have a garage with electricity, why not install a block and maybe an oil pan heater? You’d just have to set something up to remind you to unplug before you pull out!

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Minionz t1_iurqly6 wrote

All cars up north die premature deaths anyway from corrosion, since no one cleans the undercarriages. They make hose attachments for it. If its -degrees sure you're probably not able to. But people don't do it on below freezing nights, and above freezing days either.

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gathermewool t1_iurulpk wrote

Right, but the corrosion is significantly reduced at lower temps. It doesn’t matter as much if your car is covered in salt if you’re parked out in 0F temps for weeks on end. The rate of corrosion will be minimal compared to sitting in your 40F garage EVERY night.

I admit that I know this and still don’t wash my undercarriage as often as I should. I even have the attachment for me pressure washer and all!

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Minionz t1_ius23iw wrote

That is true. However the freezing point of salt water has a lower freezing point than fresh water so it would be about 28 degrees~

1