Turbos and cooling down

my cars a liar. when the water temp gauge shows 90* i know its only actually 60* but dont know how long it is until its actually up to temp
 
Ok. I normally wait a minute or two before booting it but never bother waiting before turning it off. It's under warranty so rather not waste my time.

Best to be on the safe side imo!!

Whos going to warrant abusive behavior?
 
I can be hooning as hard as I can in my 2.0TDi VAG lump and the engine will still stop/start whenever I pull up at the next set of lights. If the engineers designing it didn't feel the need for any cool down time I'm not going to worry.
 
I can be hooning as hard as I can in my 2.0TDi VAG lump and the engine will still stop/start whenever I pull up at the next set of lights. If the engineers designing it didn't feel the need for any cool down time I'm not going to worry.

They designed it as requested by the product strategy board required attributes which in turn was guided by marketing and their desire for a low as possible NEDC CO2 score. This make the car more attractive to company car users NIK tax bands and personal drivers VED band and quotable MPG actually.... ;)
 
They designed it as requested by the product strategy board required attributes which in turn was guided by marketing and their desire for a low as possible NEDC CO2 score. This make the car more attractive to company car users NIK tax bands and personal drivers VED band and quotable MPG actually.... ;)

:o

In which case I'm glad it is a company car on a 2 year lease, and I'm still not going to worry. But interesting nonetheless. Strange though as it monitors so many other attributes that keeps the engine on - cabin temp too high/low, engine temp, reverse gear, battery charge, if the cat is in a regen cycle, surely time since last full boost wouldn't have been hard to implement if it would extend the life of the turbo and also wouldn't affect combined cycle mpg tests? They're not going to thrash it surely?

Anyway after about 20 stop start cycles (minimum!) every journey I'm glad I'm not stuck with one of these cars once the warranty runs out.
 
:o

In which case I'm glad it is a company car on a 2 year lease, and I'm still not going to worry. But interesting nonetheless. Strange though as it monitors so many other attributes that keeps the engine on - cabin temp too high/low, engine temp, reverse gear, battery charge, if the cat is in a regen cycle, surely time since last full boost wouldn't have been hard to implement if it would extend the life of the turbo and also wouldn't affect combined cycle mpg tests? They're not going to thrash it surely?

I agree they probably could look at pre stop loading to reduce start stop, but the engineered start stop equipped cars will have a water pump electrically driven to keep the heater matrix warm for stop to maintain cabin heat. If you have a water cooled turbo then that will allow the cooling of the turbo whilst not burning fuel and reduce heat soak into the bearings/oil line and return where oil coking can occur.

Of course most are quick add ons for current products to drop NEDC with no extra pump and hence they prevent start stop at low ambients. Battery charge is one worth monitering aswell otherwise it becomes a reliability issues and potentially a warrenty cost.
 
The VAG turbos are water cooled with a pump that runs when the engine is off to keep the coolant flowing they had this before the stop/start cars. My friend's 2001 Ibiza Cupra has one so they have been about for a while.
 
The VAG turbos are water cooled with a pump that runs when the engine is off to keep the coolant flowing they had this before the stop/start cars. My friend's 2001 Ibiza Cupra has one so they have been about for a while.

Good point. I know the 1.8T has this, quite rare though.

Not sure about the diesels though.
 
That is why I would say wait a good 10 minutes of normal driving before booting it. Oil takes a very long time to get up to it's full operating temperature.

That all depends on the car, oil, ambient temperature and how you drive it for those first few minutes.

My ST would reach a decent oil temp within a mile or two of driving, and that is when it would get a thrashing.
 
Back
Top Bottom