Car after Winter lay-up
Discussion
I suppose it all depends on the type and age of the engine your classic has.
My Mercedes R129 spends the six winter months all tucked up in my garage,
Every two months or so, when it’s a nice sunny dry day, I charge the battery, fire it up and drive it up and down the close where I live. Get it warmed up and keep everything moving.Been doing this to my classics for years.
Roll on the summer

My Mercedes R129 spends the six winter months all tucked up in my garage,
Every two months or so, when it’s a nice sunny dry day, I charge the battery, fire it up and drive it up and down the close where I live. Get it warmed up and keep everything moving.Been doing this to my classics for years.
Roll on the summer


Edited by Old Merc on Thursday 6th March 09:12
Old Merc said:
I suppose it all depends on the type and age of the engine your classic has.
My Mercedes R129 spends the six winter months all tucked up in my garage,
Every two months or so, when it’s a nice sunny dry day, I charge the battery, fire it up and drive it up and down the close where I live. Get it warmed up and keep everything moving.Been doing this to my classics for years.
Roll on the summer

Oil can be a bit lacking in the top end after a lay-up. I don’t suppose it does a lot of damage if you fire it up straight away but the noise for a second or two doesn’t sound good.My Mercedes R129 spends the six winter months all tucked up in my garage,
Every two months or so, when it’s a nice sunny dry day, I charge the battery, fire it up and drive it up and down the close where I live. Get it warmed up and keep everything moving.Been doing this to my classics for years.
Roll on the summer


Edited by Old Merc on Thursday 6th March 09:12
Riley Blue said:
Huzzah said:
Lights, levels & safety check.
That's what I shall be doing later today when I get my Riley out for the first time since October. It's what I've done for the past 10 years and nothing untoward has happened - yet.My 1973 TR6 sprang to life after 3.5 months in hibernation fairly quickly 2 weeks ago. I'd added the recommended amount of Sta-Bil to an almost full tank of nature's finest after cleaning the spark plugs and turning on the ignition for 1 min to bring up the fuel pressure. Put it on full choke, a few turns of the key and it sprang back to life, dropped choke to ½ and let it warm up.
Gassing Station | Classic Cars and Yesterday's Heroes | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff