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-   -   Cold weather = bad gas mileage? (http://www.mitsustyle.com/forums/showthread.php?t=17860)

Shane@DBPerformance 12-11-2007 01:50 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
How?

scheides 12-11-2007 01:54 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by turbotalon1g (Post 220445)
I still put a piece of cardboard in front of the radiator, its the only way i can get the car up to operating temp.

Are you still running 'E85' ? This could be the issue?

niterydr 12-11-2007 02:56 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MustGoFaster (Post 220461)
Most new cars (like 2G DSM's) will run the same coolant throught the bolck over and over till it's warm. 3S's (even 91's) do it, and so do a lot of other cars. Helps them warm up quicker. Also, one reaon they use more fuel when cold is that when it's cold, fuel atomizes poorly, so to get the same amount of burnable fuel in the cylinder, you have to put more in.

Thank you for correcting that mis-information.

A rich mix burns cooler than a leaner mix fyi guys ;).

tpunx99GSX 12-11-2007 05:15 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
When i lived in MN i used to get really bad gas mileage in parking lots mainly.... VROOOM!!!

Kevin 1G Drummer 12-11-2007 06:08 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
My car doesn't take any longer to get to operating temperature when it's 7 degrees then it does when it's 70. Like Swanny said, rich mixtures burn cooler than lean mixes, so what Jet said, doesn't really make sense to me. The only reason I can see for an engine running a bit rich is because of the density of the air. I also don't totally buy the wheel bearing thing. I've worked on cars that had been sitting outside in the cold for days, and I haven't expierenced one that was a huge difference in resistance from one that was warm.

TwoTalons 12-11-2007 07:03 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
You ever notice how much higher your idle speed is when you start your car in cold winter weather as compared to when it's warm in the summer months?? More fuel used. It takes more fuel to warm your car up in the winter than in the summer. I guarantee it. Your coolant may be coming up to operating temp in the nearly the same amount of time, although I don't see how that's possible, but that doesn't mean your engine and everything else attached to it is fully warmed up yet.

The fluids in trannys, xfer cases, and rearends gets thicker in the cold. Until those fluids warms up, they're adding parasitic loss to the drivetrain. This all adds up to more fuel consumption. One of the nice benefits of synthetic fluids is they don't get thick in the cold like regular dino oils & lubes do. I remember having conventional fluids in one of my DSMs and parking on an incline in the winter. After sitting overnight in near zero degree temps, it would not roll back in neutral. It was like I still had the parking brake on. After switching to synthetics, it was like releasing the parking brake.

NOT THE BLUE LAMPSHADE 12-11-2007 07:14 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
I thought I was going nuts out here at WyoTech. I get about 20% less fuel economy in this cold out here!! And I'm at like ~7500ft. about too if that matters with gas consumption.

More air(denser and lower elevation and cold) = more fuel to get A/R
Less Air and Less Dense+Freezing Air = opposite?

I dunno.

turbotalon1g 12-12-2007 10:09 AM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
I am talking about in the corolla, the talon is not seeing winter this year.

A//// Guy 12-12-2007 10:19 AM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
The corolla should be the same... shouldnt take that long to warm up, and you shouldnt have to use cardboard.

niterydr 12-12-2007 10:29 AM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TwoTalons (Post 220564)
You ever notice how much higher your idle speed is when you start your car in cold winter weather as compared to when it's warm in the summer months?? More fuel used. It takes more fuel to warm your car up in the winter than in the summer. I guarantee it. Your coolant may be coming up to operating temp in the nearly the same amount of time, although I don't see how that's possible, but that doesn't mean your engine and everything else attached to it is fully warmed up yet.

The fluids in trannys, xfer cases, and rearends gets thicker in the cold. Until those fluids warms up, they're adding parasitic loss to the drivetrain. This all adds up to more fuel consumption. One of the nice benefits of synthetic fluids is they don't get thick in the cold like regular dino oils & lubes do. I remember having conventional fluids in one of my DSMs and parking on an incline in the winter. After sitting overnight in near zero degree temps, it would not roll back in neutral. It was like I still had the parking brake on. After switching to synthetics, it was like releasing the parking brake.

More fuel consumption due to a higher IAC offset values (larger steppers values) because the ICS motor is directly related to coolant temperatures? YES
Longer time in warm up enrichment, due to the ICS Motor values being a higher value and it spending more time outside of operating coolant temperature minimums? YES

Needing more fuel so the car will run "warmer"? NO, the car burns more fuel because it is in warm up enrichment longer.

:deadhorse::deadhorse::deadhorse:

FYI, I think we are agreeing :) I just broke it down a bit so it made sense to me.

niterydr 12-12-2007 10:33 AM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by NOT THE BLUE LAMPSHADE (Post 220567)
I thought I was going nuts out here at WyoTech. I get about 20% less fuel economy in this cold out here!! And I'm at like ~7500ft. about too if that matters with gas consumption.

More air(denser and lower elevation and cold) = more fuel to get A/R
Less Air and Less Dense+Freezing Air = opposite?

I dunno.

Air and fuel molecules need to find matching dancing partners. If you have 1470 air molecules and 100 fuel molecules, then you have a 14.7:1 afr.

If you have a more dense air charge, aka 2940 air molecules, you need 200 fuel molecules to get that 14.7:1 ratio.
Make sence?
Colder air is more dense=more air molecules.
Its why inefficent turbo setups can "overboost" in cold weather and heat soak/have boost fade in hot summer months, they are getting more air molecules and are at an advantage on the compressor side of things and that carries thru the system to the engine. Most of the time engine bay temperatures balance out after the car is up to operating temperatures, but a car WILL make more boost @ 0 degrees versus 100 degee intake air temperatures if the system isn't setup/tuned properly to avoid that.

Andrew7dg 12-12-2007 12:36 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by niterydr (Post 220645)
Air and fuel molecules need to find matching dancing partners. If you have 1470 air molecules and 100 fuel molecules, then you have a 14.7:1 afr.

:ring: and BOOM!!


Had a question about heat coming into the car from the heater. It seems like my car is always kind of cold. It doesn't get truly warm until it is on the highway. I mean I get heat out of the car pretty soon but not hot temperature like it is on the highway. I removed the A/C condenser because of weight and that opened up the radiator for more cooling. Did that have anything to do with it? Do I have a bad thermostat or is the engine running that cool when around town? Coming off the highway it stays warm.
Fluid level is good also.

niterydr 12-12-2007 12:45 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Andrew7dg (Post 220667)
:ring: and BOOM!!


Had a question about heat coming into the car from the heater. It seems like my car is always kind of cold. It doesn't get truly warm until it is on the highway. I mean I get heat out of the car pretty soon but not hot temperature like it is on the highway. I removed the A/C condenser because of weight and that opened up the radiator for more cooling. Did that have anything to do with it? Do I have a bad thermostat or is the engine running that cool when around town? Coming off the highway it stays warm.
Fluid level is good also.

Check your coolant temps via logger. You should still get to operating temperatures, but you could have a failing t-stat.

runninW.O.T. 12-12-2007 04:16 PM

Re: Cold weather = bad gas mileage?
 
I can usually pick up a couple if i reset the ecu by disconnecting the bat for like 5 min!


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