makhi said:I just take it easy on the accelerator for the last bit of the trip.
Ma$e said:Its safe to idle them before switching off. I'm guilty of not doing it though:flyfun:
S1NGH 001 said:Just curious to know, how many of you guys idle your tractors before switching them off after a drive ?
Clownshoe said:Some very good comments and I agree with it all. I have an old school Jeep diesel donkey and from new it has been religiously idled up (until oil pressure gauge comes up) and taken easy until the water temp has come up. Idling down I just get ready to exit (seatbelt, wallet, phone, etc) before shutting off. This engine "touch wood" has not given an ounce of trouble, when other similar engines are the bane of their owners existence with blown turbos, warped heats (there are 4 of them).
I recently did a cedarberg trip with fully loaded car and 4x4trailer. Now I can imaging the damage I would have done if I came off the highway into a service station after 3 hours at full boost stood on the brakes into the pumps and switched off the engine immediately to go have a piss. That is where damage occurs. Turbos spin in oil that is busy cooking. Then a thin residue of burnt oil on the bearing.
But too much of a good thing is also bad. The most engine wear occurs under idling, correct me if I am wrong. So idling a car up to full temp is a bad thing in diesel and petrols.
Philip Foglar said:With any turbo engine I would allow it to idle a bit before shutting off, but most important is to do a "cool off" run as you are nearing your destination - nothing better than off throttle running under compression or just light throttle. The turbo is then working far less and is able to cool off far easier than even idling - reason being, when the car is now sitting idling there is then no airflow through the engine bay and the electric fan only comes on for the sake of coolant and engine temperature - so no point idling the engine if you have just been giving it horns!
Andy1GP said:Philip Foglar said:With any turbo engine I would allow it to idle a bit before shutting off, but most important is to do a "cool off" run as you are nearing your destination - nothing better than off throttle running under compression or just light throttle. The turbo is then working far less and is able to cool off far easier than even idling - reason being, when the car is now sitting idling there is then no airflow through the engine bay and the electric fan only comes on for the sake of coolant and engine temperature - so no point idling the engine if you have just been giving it horns!
Well said phillip, as much as most of us like to "jaag" the last stretch driving home this is where you can prolong the turbo life. The cool down run period is more critical than the idling.
Same goes for hammering your brakes. Don't just stop and switch off, the brakes will cook crack and fail. Running the car without load really helps make things last longer. Some Turbo's go in excess of 100,000rpm that's ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND RPM, nevermind 20k. And once you open one and see how little oil film actually gets to the core for lubrication and cooling you appreciate how delicate they are.
They are not all watercooled like the engine. The little bit of oil that touches the bush/bearing is it's only lifeline.
m0lt3n said:My opinion is that idling for minutes on end does more bad than good
m0lt3n said:m0lt3n said:My opinion is that idling for minutes on end does more bad than good
Care to enlighten us buddy :rollsmile:
S1NGH 001 said:We're a bunch of clued up fanatics :rollsmile:
flyhid said:I thought that all newer model turbo cars has has turbo protectors so no need to idle or am I wrong.......
It's always advisable to let the Turbo cool down for a bit, especially when driving hard, remember the turbo is running at approx 19000 - 22000 rpm
m0lt3n said:m0lt3n said:My opinion is that idling for minutes on end does more bad than good
Care to enlighten us buddy :rollsmile:
When you are parked and idling the normal amount of air is not pushed into the engine therefore you are running rich which isnt to good. Thats my deduction for the car mag once saying in tech section not to idle excessively as the car is running rich then. And then also BMW says dont idle your car up to temp but rather drive your car carefully till it is at operating temp.
Then also...why stress your cooling system, I think in most cases you are making the engine warmer than it was (till the fan kicks in) with idling for minutes on end than what the engine temp was when you stopped.
Also....:fencelook::fencelook: throw water on a pan or whatever coolant on any warm object (after welding anything...) it doesnt take minutes to cool down its near instantly cooler than damaging temp's. 30secs of idling is more than enough to have your whole engine (turbo included) at steady state when looking at temperatures.
Lang 2 sent daar, maar hoop my swak engels is verstaanbaar :rollsmile: