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How long do you all wait to warm up the engine after starting it up before you drive off?(From a cold start that is.)
I have heard varying thoughts on this in the past. Some say 30 seconds due to electronic fuel injection. Some wait several minutes. The owners manual I think says don't let the engine idle for more than a few mintues to prevent damage? (that one doesn't make any sense to me.) I am just trying to prevent any unnecessary premature damage/wear to the engine as much as possible. I just figured that the longer you let the engine warm-up at idle, the more lubricated and 'ready' the engine will be upon driving off.
Also, BMW M5 and M3 have indicator lights on the tach to indicate when it is 'ok' to rev up to that particular RPM when driving while the engine is reaching optimal temp. A while back, I read that it could take up to 15 minutes of normal driving before the engine management will allow redline RPM to be reached. Any thoughts on any of this?
Thanks in advance!
93 coupe blk : RS BARN chip, RS BARN cat-back, castor blocks, KLA strut mounts, brey-krause underbrace, KLA strut brace, MO30 sway bars, Bilstein Coilovers, K&N filter, 9mag intake mod, MOTUL oil, induction cleaned, etc.
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Give it a couple of minutes (2-5?) to allow the oil to flow to all the internal parts. Taking off too soon just put more stress on un-lubed bearings and such .
Rick
93 968 (My summer car), 06 Jetta (My winter car)
79 924 (Wife's summer car), 02 C230K (Wife's winter car)
00 Passat (Son's car), 02 Trailblazer (Daughter's Car)
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FYI...in Germany it has long been against the law to idle your car excessively, i.e. 'warm it up' because of clean air laws.
So it stands to reason in my book that the German manufacturers will build the cars to take a short warm up.
As far as whether it's good or not until it's warmed up - I think that if you start of quick but as little a strain on the engine as you need till it warms up!
On our cars, I'm more worried about the timing/balance belts 'warming up' and not snapping than the metal components!!!
Michael Sorbera
aka San Antonio Silver Bullet
2002 VW Beetle TDI
2004 Nissan Titan Crew Cab
2004 Cherokee 33ft Travel Trailer
1990 Mercury Grand Marquis
1993 Amazon Green 968 Coupe (sold)
2002 Speed-Yellow Boxster (sold)
1987 Slate Grey 944 Turbo (sold)
1987 Guards Red 944 (first Porsche - sold)
(This post was last modified: 01-16-2007, 08:27 PM by
sasilverbullet.)
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I agree with Anchorman, start, get everything adjusted, drive modestly to warm up. It probably takes 10-15 minutes for everything to come to optimum operating temperature (thoroughly heat soaked), so hold off on the "full out" for a while. We haven't been above freezing for a week with snow on the roads so the Porsche is garage bound - Sniff.
Cheers
Stephen G.
Moscow, Idaho
'93 Guards Red coupe, 6-speed, LSD, 17's, chip, strut bar, M030 sways, airbox mod,
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I drive Porsche's within 5 seconds of start-up. Keep revs below 4k rpm and up to half throttle until the oil pressure at idle drops to your normal warm spot (usually around 1.5 - 2 bar). At this point, the oil is warm and you can flog it like the beast it is, full throttle, right up to redline.
That's my story and I'm stickin' to it.
Dave S., '92 968 Midnight Blue 145k+ miles
F-Stock Racer and Faithful Daily Driver
Car#662 at Chicago Region DE's & Club Races
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[quote name='Anchorman' post='29980' date='Jan 16 2007, 09:41 PM']One of the reasons to start driving - modestly - almost immediately is that it gives a chance for EVERYTHING to get warmed up, as noted above by Super Marv. The entire drive train needs to get "warm", not just the engine. So, like Bob, I start the engine, put on my seat belt, and away I go, keeping generally below 3k rpm until the heater starts putting out warm air.[/quote]
I, too, agree with this thread's concensus of a short warm-up (only a few seconds) and driving moderately until the coolant and oil temps come close to normal operating levels.
Anchorman's point was also made in the current issue of Roundel (BMWCCA's monthly publication) by tech guru Mike Miller....he believes that it's important to warm up everything, including the drivetrain, before putting the pedal to the metal. So a short warm-up (30 seconds) and moderate driving as described above are also his prescription, as well. Warming up your engine while you're in the house finishing your coffee is a needless waste of gasoline.
1999 911
2002 Boxster
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1992 968 (sold)
2003 Boxster (sold)
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