Okay, no offense, but 30 minutes is excessive. It should be at full normal operating temperature in less than 10 minutes.I don't know where most of you live, but I don't have a garage and when it's 20 degrees below zero my car is on for at 30 minutes before we go anywhere!
I don't know where most of you live, but I don't have a garage and when it's 20 degrees below zero my car is on for at 30 minutes before we go anywhere!
This^. Parking outside is for chumps as we have quickly come to learn since moving into a condo with a heated underground parkade,Yes, and mine sits in a garage all night. I want a nice toasty car.
Seriously? You cannot buy a new vehicle in Alberta without one. They are all ordered as standard that way from the factory. Remote start is pretty much a "standard upgrade" on all but the very most base models as well but a remote start won't get you going if your engine is too cold to crank. You'd need a boost to get going then.I don't know a soul with a block heater,. and have NEVER seen an outlet to plug them in, and it has been artic cold for 2 months.. EVERYONE has the remote starter..
These are extremely uncommon these days (and are frankly considered something only the elderly ever ask for according to a friend who owns a dealership). Remote start has rendered them virtually obsolete....
TVGuy, I wouldn't trust running an electric heater in my car un-supervised, and can honestly say I've never seen anything like it in Mid-Western, and South-Western Ontario. I've also never seen the mirror mittens, but I have seen the other tricks. Both my vehicles have heated mirrors, and I just use the ice scraper for all the other surfaces. I don't use the block heater in either of my vehicles, simply because before last winter, we didn't have enough super cold days a year to go through the bother of hooking it up.
This^. Parking outside is for chumps as we have quickly come to learn since moving into a condo with a heated underground parkade,
Seriously? You cannot buy a new vehicle in Alberta without one. They are all ordered as standard that way from the factory. Remote start is pretty much a "standard upgrade" on all but the very most base models as well but a remote start won't get you going if your engine is too cold to crank. You'd need a boost to get going then.
These are extremely uncommon these days (and are frankly considered something only the elderly ever ask for according to a friend who owns a dealership). Remote start has rendered them virtually obsolete.
I do that now. I have a shop light with a 40w bulb and I place right next to the battery. Battery is on its 5th winter and will fire the truck right up -20. Before I started doing this, -20 would strain the start of my truck. As for block heaters, they aren't common in the states unless you live in Alaska or one of the very northern states or you have a diesel. Even though, modern diesels will start just fine in zero temps without one. I've thought about getting one for my gas truck since the last two winters have been like the winters of old.Growing up in the 60's my parents never had a block heater (probably never heard of them), but my dad would put a low watt light bulb (one of those mechanic ones) under the hood and our car started right up every morning. (We didn't have a garage either.) He only had an eighth grade education, but he was VERY smart - I wonder if it was his idea.
That number is more like millions of people live very close to highways and interstates in this country and yes firing your car up and getting it up to 55-75 mph in a very quick time is not good when it is very cold outside especially when it is done often. If it only gets sub zero once a winter, no big deal, but many times and you can do some damage over the life of the car.I live 30 seconds from a state highway. There are hundreds of people that have driveways off that particular highway (and tens of thousands of people around the country that are the same). So don't tell me no one will be running highway speeds immediately after starting.
Seriously... I haven't seen one around here.....I bought my new car in June, I agree my starter was a standard upgrade, but for me it is a luxury/necessity.. I can't scrape.. Don't care who cares either
My remote starter has the option to start the car ( I believe it somewhere bewtween 3-5 min) every hour on the nights we know it is going to dip extremely low.. Used it a few times this winter, newer car, so not necessary..
I am a chump, as I have no garage, so I need to do so.. I own a fourplex, in a suburban area, we all park on the street..![]()
Ah, memories! That's how my DDad kept our farm machinery going during the brutal sub-arctic winters in Northern Alberta during my childhood...Growing up in the 60's my parents never had a block heater (probably never heard of them), but my dad would put a low watt light bulb (one of those mechanic ones) under the hood and our car started right up every morning. (We didn't have a garage either.) He only had an eighth grade education, but he was VERY smart - I wonder if it was his idea.
I have a Ford Focus PZEV. To cut pollution PZEV cars are designed to get up to operating temperature quickly. The temperature gauge is at normal warm range by the time I have driven 2 blocks. But, yes, it is California where the record low is like 17 degrees, and that only happens once or twice every 10 years.
Just an FYI, the Focus PZEV is no different than many of the other Focus' sold throughout the USA, it's just got the flashy badge. Any 2.0 L 130 hp I4 equipped Focus is basically the PZEV vehicle, they just stuck the PZEV badge on the Californian ones.
The cooling system capacity is small (maybe 1.25 gallons), so it gets up to higher operating temps faster. It's probably not even as small as the one in my wife's Civic. However, I don't know about the Focus, especially the automatic version with the dual clutch. I've heard it's been really bad.
http://www.wtae.com/investigations/...-complaints-about-ford-transmissions/24333878
my Nissan Juke has a 1.6 Litre engine, and takes forever to get up to operating temp.
My Nissan Frontier takes forever too. The wifes CRV warms up in no time. If your Juke in NA then it will take some time, if it is their turbo'd version that will warm it up quicker but you don't want to be running a cold turbo'd engine balls to the walls.my Nissan Juke has a 1.6 Litre engine, and takes forever to get up to operating temp.
Mine has the turbocharger, All of the Jukes sold in North America are the turbo 1.6 L. It takes forever to warm up, longer than the 2.5 L in my Rogue.My Nissan Frontier takes forever too. The wifes CRV warms up in no time. If your Juke in NA then it will take some time, if it is their turbo'd version that will warm it up quicker but you don't want to be running a cold turbo'd engine balls to the walls.
It is a WHOLE lot more than a badge. It added $2,500 to the price of the car.Just an FYI, the Focus PZEV is no different than many of the other Focus' sold throughout the USA, it's just got the flashy badge. Any 2.0 L 130 hp I4 equipped Focus is basically the PZEV vehicle, they just stuck the PZEV badge on the Californian ones.