View Poll Results: How long do do you let your car warm up
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How long to warm up car
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 357
Likes: 0
From: Wisconsin
Vehicle: 2000 Tiburon
Ok so i have always wondered if this was true and many people have different opinions. Someone else told me that for our cars you have to warm them up for 5 minutes. So i usually wait for the rpm to go down to normal before driving in cold temps. But I found this article on yahoo today and thought it would clear up this question and just wanted to share it:
http://autos.yahoo.com/articles/auto...car-in-winter/
http://autos.yahoo.com/articles/auto...car-in-winter/
Senior Member

Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 711
Likes: 1
From: Puerto Rico//Atlanta, GA
Vehicle: 1997 Beta Swapped Accent
I don't wait because a few years ago a read an article in "sports compact car" (I think) that explained that you don't need to warm up you car and the importance of using thermostats.
I let mine warm up to get the juices flowing, usually 2-4 minutes until it rests at idle and the coolant level gets above the first two Cold lines. I want the oil to get moved around and do its job lubricating before I hit 3,000+ RPM
I keep my car garaged at home, and in a parking garage at work. Home garage stays around 45-55 degrees in the winter, @work it's around 35-40 degrees.
I keep my car garaged at home, and in a parking garage at work. Home garage stays around 45-55 degrees in the winter, @work it's around 35-40 degrees.
Senior Member

Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 4,185
Likes: 0
From: Atlanta, GA
Vehicle: MC + RD2 + AW11 + 944 = 4x Win
I give mine a few mins mostly for comfort and to ensure the defog is warm. Also I tend to hit high revs before the stupid auto shifts so I want that oil nice and hot before I got tearassing up and down the highway.
it depends usually in the morning before school i let it warm up for like 5-7 minutes so my car isnt freezing and for the ice to melt, but if i just try to leave its really hard to change gears so i have to wait for the lube to warm up (stupid cheap gear lube)
Senior Member

Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 829
Likes: 0
From: Red Deer
Vehicle: 2012 mitsubishi eclipse spyder gs, 2001 hyundai tiburon
What really bothers me is that most of these fact finders either live in a climate that rarely requires cars to run with full blast heat to make them tolerable, or have heated garages to park in and get into a warm vehicle anyway. Try hopping into a car sitting outside all night in -30 C(-22 F), after 10 minutes of idle.
You can still see your breath. Furthermore, after driving for 20 min, you still feel like your in a freezer. The moisture in your breath frosts up the windows and makes it a hazard to drive.
Depending on the temp in the morning is what I base my idle time on. I'm out the door by 6 in the morning so usually there hasn't been much of a chance that the air warmed up too much from the evening before.
You can still see your breath. Furthermore, after driving for 20 min, you still feel like your in a freezer. The moisture in your breath frosts up the windows and makes it a hazard to drive.
Depending on the temp in the morning is what I base my idle time on. I'm out the door by 6 in the morning so usually there hasn't been much of a chance that the air warmed up too much from the evening before.
in the winter (we actually had a pretty bad one here this year) i usually would go out, start my car, lock the door and come back inside, and i could hear when it went to idle so when it would (usually about 3-5minutes in the cold) i'd go outside and turn on the defrost and sh*t on and wait till the coolant was heated up enough for the heater to work. in the summer i just wait for it to settle to idle

















