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or do you have to wait or do something? is there a process? can someone give me info. and also, my cars are very recent, like 2005.

2007-02-18 14:02:31 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Cars & Transportation Maintenance & Repairs

8 answers

It is always a good idea to give the motor 10-30 seconds for the oil to reach the upper engine parts. In the winter, even with the 5W-30 oil that most cars use, the thickness of the oil at a cold start extends that to time up to 1 minute in extreme cold. When you begin driving keep the RPMs down until the motor oil heats up, usually 2-6 minutes depending on the temperature and the weight and freshness on the oil.

2007-02-18 14:12:12 · answer #1 · answered by Shawn M 3 · 1 0

Older cars you had to let the oil warm up. Today you only have to let them run for a couple of minutes and just drive slow for the first few miles, of course you need to see out the windows, so the defroster needs to be working . t\This is the process that I just read in a magazine. Drive slow and make sure you can see then when the temp is up and you are down the road a few miles then you can drive the speed limit. If you are next to the interstate you may need to wait a little longer. Don't want to cause an accident.

2007-02-18 14:09:12 · answer #2 · answered by MISS-MARY 6 · 1 0

In cold weather the oil is very thick. Even with multiviscosity oils (like 5w-30) it takes several minutes for the oil to loosen up and provide adequate lubrication for higher speeds. Also, engines perform better when they warm up to operating temperature. I suggest when temperatures are below the "teens" that you start your car and let it idle for several minutes. The fuel consumption of warming it up will save you in wear and tear and will make fuel consumption lower when driving a warm engine. Good indication is when the temp gauge begins to move away from the cold and towards the normal operation range.

2007-02-18 14:11:22 · answer #3 · answered by teleioo2002 1 · 1 0

the foremost ingredient to do is steer away from any surprising variations in direction or velocity. as quickly as you lose traction you would be in a skid which you will could steer out of in the past you hit some thing or bypass off the line. My appropriate suggestion is to bypass out to a huge empty automobile parking zone and get ready as quickly because of the fact the roads start to get undesirable. force at a sluggish velocity and slam on your brakes. See if the truck starts to skid and then attempt to regain administration by ability of straightening the wheels to get them rolling lower back. attempt an identical ingredient with much less braking stress to work out how long it takes back to a provide up. attempt turns additionally and spot what it takes to maintain administration. The prepare provides you with adventure and self assurance for highway utilising under those circumstances. additionally bear in concepts if the truck has ABS you're able to hold down the pedal to have it help you provide up. If it does not you're able to pump the brakes to provide up.

2016-11-23 17:42:29 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, you can. But you should not! Give it a couple of minutes to warm up - you will greatly extend life expectancy of all mechanical components not to mention gas savings.

2007-02-22 07:42:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

let it run for about 2 or 3 mins befor driveing it

2007-02-18 14:08:21 · answer #6 · answered by davedebo198305 4 · 0 0

no you need to give it about 5 to 10 minutes or so to warm up, any more then that you'll burn gas kill your gas millage, and you'll heat up your exhaust valve to the point where it melts...

2007-02-18 14:08:58 · answer #7 · answered by MrOneDer 3 · 0 0

I don"t /Wife does I have to fix leaks.

2007-02-18 16:53:25 · answer #8 · answered by section hand 6 · 0 1

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