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waiting to rev the engine out? oil viscosity and saturation
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03-28-2007, 11:13 AM | #1 |
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waiting to rev the engine out? oil viscosity and saturation
we all know we shouldnt rev the engine out in the morning until the oil is at operating temp
but what about after you have been parked for an hour and come back to still warm oil (happens to me a lot after my one shot classes) im sure most of the oil has dripped back into the pan by then, and i know it takes time for the parts to be fully saturated with oil after startup regardless of temperature, but how long really this also got me to thinking WHY do we wait for the oil to reach "operating temperature" synthetic oil has the same viscosity over a VERY broad range of temperatures, so unless you live somewhere where its 30 degrees out theres not going to be much of a diffrence in viscosity especially compared to normal motor oil
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03-28-2007, 12:06 PM | #2 |
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I live somewhere where it goes well below 30 degrees. But anyway the oil isn't the only reason to let the engine reach operating temperature. Efficiency and emissions are at their worst when the engine is cold whether or not the oil is at an ideal operating temperature at 30 degrees F. A warmed up engine will typically idle around 15:1 air/fuel ratio. When cold this can be as high as 4:1 a/f, and even higher while cranking. Also engine tolerances are designed with a certain operating temperature in mind. Most thermostats keep the water temperature around 180-195 F. Running the engine hard too far above or below this will lead to premature wear.. although now that they're making blocks out of magnesium or whatever the 335's is made out of (I'm no metallurgist) I'm not sure how much this applies.
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03-28-2007, 12:37 PM | #3 | |
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Quote:
If you've ever drained oil on a car that sits overnight in 70F weather, and compared it to one that has been warmed up, it's easy to visually notice the difference whether you're using synthetic or not. |
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