Discussion
Hi folks , just wondered if anyone else lets there car warm up by just ticking over ? , I use too on my griff but in a conversation with a dealer we was talking about the correct procedure to warm up the speed six engine , and he said that leaving the speed six engine to warm up to temp was not a good thing . I just wondered if any of you vet's of the speed six world had any views on this .
Lensey said:
Fit an oil heater, leave it on for a couple of hours, start, drive off keep revs low until oil up to temp.
Rinse and Repeat.... Loads of posts on this, oil heaters, warming up, also try the mytuscan website, which i looked at to which shows how to warm the car up while driving. Most people, including me, follow that methodology, but all in all it's about being sensible, let the car warm up thoroughly, and when it has, give it some!My startup routine, constructed from various threads on PH:
Oil heater for an hour or so beforehand.
Unplug oil heater
Unplug accumate
Push car out of garage
Close garage door (reduces idling time after starting)
Start car, feet off pedals
Drive off, restricting revs to....
<40C = stay below 2500 revs
<50C = stay below 4000 revs
<60C = stay below 6000 revs
>60C = gloves off and give it laldy
This worked well on my Tamora for the 2 years I owned it - apart from the oil heater, which I'm using for the first time on my Tuscan now.
(Thanks to ShiDevil for his original thread on the topic)
With the oil heater you should note that the initial oil temperature drops as the oil transfers its heat around the engine. It takes a wee while to get back to full temperature, so need to take it easy and follow the temp / revs guide above.
Hope this helps.
Neil
Oil heater for an hour or so beforehand.
Unplug oil heater
Unplug accumate
Push car out of garage
Close garage door (reduces idling time after starting)
Start car, feet off pedals
Drive off, restricting revs to....
<40C = stay below 2500 revs
<50C = stay below 4000 revs
<60C = stay below 6000 revs
>60C = gloves off and give it laldy
This worked well on my Tamora for the 2 years I owned it - apart from the oil heater, which I'm using for the first time on my Tuscan now.
(Thanks to ShiDevil for his original thread on the topic)
With the oil heater you should note that the initial oil temperature drops as the oil transfers its heat around the engine. It takes a wee while to get back to full temperature, so need to take it easy and follow the temp / revs guide above.
Hope this helps.
Neil
Mattt said:
Stay 2 below oil temp, so 3k at 50, 4k at 60, 2k at 40 etc.
That's a much easier rule of thumb to work with!Just one problem - in Scotland I'd end up driving everywhere at about 30mph if restricted to 2000 revs until oil at 40deg....

Joking aside, though, fair points re tighter reining of revs at each temperature. I guess it comes down to the driver's safety margin. I treat the maximums as "Absolutely don't do it. Ever." then work up gradually through the range, so probably not far off your guide in practice. But appreciate that both subsequent posts are more prudent guidance for the OP.
You have to love PH for this - every day's a school day.
Neil.
I thought it was a 3000 rpm limit until 60 degrees, but in winter cold air on the sensor makes it appear that you haven't got it; i've found the best way of judging the temperature in such conditions is to see what it reaches in traffic - on Sunday the air temp was about 5 degrees, after 15 minutes of running the oil was 54, in traffic it reached 65..........that i think gives a truer indication of the actual oil temperature.
Hollowpockets said:
or just start it and drive off, be sensible until the oil hits 50+,up in scotland i never get above 55 on the oil
im glad thats not just me, i havn't seen 60 since summer.it could be a perception thing, but i find that turning on the heater to max and the fans to 1 light seems to warm up the oil temp a bit quicker. this could just be my perception though, i havn't cracked out a stop watch or anything
tang lung said:
I have not heard of oil heater plugs are they for extreme cold ? and are they fitted to the car , thanks once again guys for your help much appreciated :-))
The oil heater is a pad that is attached to the bottom of the oil tank. The pad then plugs into a mains socket via a wire with a plug on it. When plugged in the pad gets hot and heats up the oil.Google Wolverine oil heaters
..............
Done it for you. Wolverine
blueg33 said:
The oil heater is a pad that is attached to the bottom of the oil tank. The pad then plugs into a mains socket via a wire with a plug on it. When plugged in the pad gets hot and heats up the oil.
Google Wolverine oil heaters
..............
Done it for you. Wolverine
Thank you very much Nick Google Wolverine oil heaters
..............
Done it for you. Wolverine
phoenixz said:
im glad thats not just me, i havn't seen 60 since summer.
it could be a perception thing, but i find that turning on the heater to max and the fans to 1 light seems to warm up the oil temp a bit quicker. this could just be my perception though, i havn't cracked out a stop watch or anything
Even in the summer mine doesn't get above 55/60¤,I could do 20 /30 miles then sit in traffic for ages,& it wouldn't get anywhere near 70¤it could be a perception thing, but i find that turning on the heater to max and the fans to 1 light seems to warm up the oil temp a bit quicker. this could just be my perception though, i havn't cracked out a stop watch or anything
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