avongil
Pre-takeoff checklist
Lucky guys. My 77 Mercedes wont shut off when you turn the key 50% of the time.
Lucky guys. My 77 Mercedes wont shut off when you turn the key 50% of the time.
This is nothing new. I had a '47 Chevy 5 window PU that would always auto shut off at a stop light. Sometimes it would even auto shut off while driving down the road..!!
But they don't screw up as often as the "barstool geniuses" drinking Keystone Light and telling stories about their uncle's buddy's nephew's teacher's barber's mom who has a faulty Jeep Grand Cherokee....
Sucks when automakers try to reinvent perfectly good controls that were intuitive to operate.
Yup! I had a brand new'72 Chevy Vega GT and it would stall out at the red light w/ the AC on. What a POS car! Kept it 9 months and got rid of it.
I had a '74 Vega. One of my all time favorites. Mostly because of the wildly built 350 CID I put in it with a T-400 transmission. On about the fourth differential explosion I finally found an old Franklin quick change rear end that fit with some slight (hammer) modifications to the body. I wish I had pictures but back then I was young and dumb and thought the good times would go on forever.
Wish I had a 350 in mine. That aluminum block 4 cyl sucked.
OK, I confess. I am a horrible excuse for a human being.
I stopped in the middle of a railway crossing and watched a passenger completely lose it when the engine shut off.
I'm laughing right now, just thinking about it.
I'm getting coal in my stocking (again) this year, aren't I. sigh...
Cold starts are bad because the oil is all drained back into the pan. I seriously doubt all the oil has drained back in the < 1min typical stop and it probably isn't going to make a bit of difference engine longevity wise.... I'm sure Ford studied this. I'd be more worried about the life of the starter motors....
But you're saving the Earth from us vermin humans. So you got that going for you.Every mechanic may know that. But, no one will be able to show you one bit of data that says that stop/start reduces the life of your engine by even one mile.
Try Craigslist/Havana.I demand the return of:
-standard transmissions
-no gear/brake/ig key interlock
-door locks you can get a coathanger around!!
But think of the polar bears.Wow, that does sound potentially hazardous.
Try Craigslist/Havana.
But in Havana that "is" a new car. The State has decreed so. And the State loves you.I didnt say I wanted an old car, I want those useful features properly restored to today's vehicles.
I demand the return of:
-standard transmissions
-no gear/brake/ig key interlock
-door locks you can get a coathanger around!!
... I would not be informed enough to pass judgement on the engineers at Ford
It's funny when people are worried about stop/start wearing out the engine because of "cold start" issues and "oil draining out".
It's a very clever system. It only works when the engine temps (oil, IAT, coolant, head, catalytic converter) are within a certain range. It measures the rate of cooling down and it restarts if required (for example, stop/start never allows the cat heating cycle to be repeated. If cat temps cool down too much, it restarts before needing to run the cat heating cycle again). It checks the required electrical/AirCon load and restarts if required. On turbocharged cars if the modeled turbocharger temperature is above a certain value it let's it cool down before shutting off and so on. It even decides how quickly it has to restart based on the speed you lift your foot off the brake/depress the clutch in stick shift cars.
The difference in starter wear is so small it can't even be measured within any reasonable tolerance. Starters aren't usually replaced because of mechanical failures anyways.
So. Enjoy your start/stop, it really won't hurt a thing. And it might save a few polar bears.
Why oh why do you hate the environment so?
A lot of the conventional-engine autostarts use what's essentially a beefed-up starter motor. There's a lot of variance in the smoothness of the restart from manufacturer to manufacturer. If there's noticeable judder/vibration, it's annoying as heck and I defeat it. If it's smooth, I'll keep it on. And yes, anything with a CVT transmission is a bit disconcerting with the "motorboating" effect of vehicle speed lagging behind engine speed. Audi and others even put artificial "steps" in CVT power delivery to make the CVT seem like a conventional auto. Odd.I was in a BMW uber car that seemed to have autostart and it sure sound like the car cranked each time it restarted.
I have no idea how the Volt engine starts. It just quietly starts purring. The only unnerving thing is driving a car where the engine rpms are often decoupled from the car speed.
My Mazda nearly killed me when I first bought it - very steep, narrow, rural road, intersecting with a fairly well traveled major road; view to the left obstructed by a McMansion privacy fence. Had to roll forward to peek; big truck coming, press the clutch in, to roll back - and nothing. It "helps" on hills by waiting about an hour before the clutch disengages and lets you roll back; O.K. not an hour, but long enough to require a panic shift into reverse.
Keyless ignition is kinda dumb, almost pointless, as well. Like a rocket sled back to a 1930s DeSoto.
The rental I had, didn't appear to use the starter motor to restart... The cylinders stopped with a fuel charge in them, by appearing to cut off the spark. When starting again, the brain appeared to fire off the appropriate cylinder that was just past TDC to restart it...
I could be mistaken, but there wasn't any big current draw or click of starter solenoid or sound of cranking when the idle restart fired off..
Also, as to the "oil draining back into the block" issue, that pretty much doesn't happen on any modern vehicle because almost every oil filter used has an anti-drain valve (read: rubber gravity flap/valve) that prevents oil from returning to the pan on restarts. Lifters/etc don't lose their charge of oil for quite a long time after shutdown, and modern oils provide more than enough lubrication to prevent any cold start/dry start problems. It simply just isn't an issue short of not starting your car for months at a time.
I actually remember a car that had some kind of flexible rubber container maybe 4" dia. on the floor, you depressed it to spray alcohol mix on the windshield. Anyone remember?Highbeam switches on the floor
I had one. 68 MustangI actually remember a car that had some kind of flexible rubber container maybe 4" dia. on the floor, you depressed it to spray alcohol mix on the windshield. Anyone remember?
Yup.I actually remember a car that had some kind of flexible rubber container maybe 4" dia. on the floor, you depressed it to spray alcohol mix on the windshield. Anyone remember?
I don't think hybrid cars have dedicated starter motors. I believe the same electric motor that moves the whole car is used to start the engine.I had a hybrid that did the engine shut off thing as a rental, and it drove me nuts. I wonder if the starters fail early on those vehicles.
I actually remember a car that had some kind of flexible rubber container maybe 4" dia. on the floor, you depressed it to spray alcohol mix on the windshield. Anyone remember?
To keep this aviation related, my friend bought a cabin Waco and we're sitting in it running the checklist getting ready to fire it up the first time and he gets down to the "crank the engine" step and can't figure it out. I told him I think it's that high-beam-type button on the floor.I actually remember a car that had some kind of flexible rubber container maybe 4" dia. on the floor, you depressed it to spray alcohol mix on the windshield. Anyone remember?
I don't think hybrid cars have dedicated starter motors. I believe the same electric motor that moves the whole car is used to start the engine.
And vacuum operated windshield wipers that would stop when you stepped on the gas to pass on a 2 lane highway.