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I drive hard...everyday
i usually dont wait for the oil temp to hit 180 before i start revving her up to 4-5 before shifting. I'm kind of a noob so was hoping to get some wisdom from anyone on here on proper driving. for example i dont know if what i said even has any negative affects on the car but i would like to find out if it does and what precautionary measures i can take insure my car's longevity thanks
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reading the thread title put drake's stupid 'motto' song stuck in my head. :facepalm:
4-5 before shifting is nothing, but i usually wait 30 seconds to let the temp gauge on the left panel go up by one dot, then drive easy until the engine is 'warm'. then you can do whatever you want. |
Erry day I'm Hustlin'
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Just from talking with people who have an oil pressure gauge wait until oil temps hits 180 which usually takes longer than for the car temps to go up.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I897 using Tapatalk 2 |
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water temp is far different from oil temp reading on a cold engine, so as zman says, wait till 180F if you're going to go heavy footed.
water temp can reach 180F in like 3min time on a summer morning....and oil temp is sub 100F. |
Spearfish25 has a nice video showing oil pressures on a cold startup. It should encourage you to wait for oil temps to rise to around 180* before getting on the car too hard.
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If you are telling us that you rev before 180??? That means you know it adds stress to the engine. Right? So why ask this. This thread is a waste of 1 minute of my life. |
Pfftt...i started my car up in -49*C weather and started beating the **** out of the car right away. Hit the rev limit in every gear, even in reverse
haha, jk. |
definately wait until the engine warms up a bit before you gun it. That cannot be good for the longevity of the engine. (or for the next owner lol) Damn....
This is the reason why I am always hesitant to buy a used car... unless I buy it from a women or senior citizen. ;) |
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* For anybody unfamiliar, when you install an oil cooler the temperature reading is after the oil passes through the cooler but before it goes in the engine. This means the actual temperature of the oil in the engine is probably closer to 190/200. So for us without oil coolers I would wait maybe a little more than 180. |
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