:rofl:Argyll Andy said:Yes, they do Ron Ron
:rofl:Argyll Andy said:Yes, they do Ron Ron
sars said:Argyll Andy said:ronk said:Do the gauges display Water Temp now?
Yes, they do Ron Ron
Helped you there and it’s probably the Toyota influence
Argyll Andy said:As an aside, the M40i water temperature takes very little time to go from COLD to normal, much quicker than the 35iS.
Smartbear said:sars said:Argyll Andy said:Yes, they do Ron Ron
Helped you there and it’s probably the Toyota influence
I thought it was the Crystals influence?![]()
https://youtu.be/SxtvDbleWxY
Rob
The.Analyst said:The original question and it’s answer is more moderated by the advances in technology rather than size.
For example a S54 engine in a M Zed has a cast iron block and no complex heat management systems.
In contrast a B58 engine has an alloy block, complex heat management, insulation on the engine etc etc
A generalisation is that you should ideally only operate an engine where you can reach the nominal operating oil temperature plus a period of time to burn off the pollutants that accumulating the oil prior to reaching normal oil temperature.
Therefore the engine when shutdown will have its moisture driven out of both the oil and its actual engine.
So a S54 may require say 25-50 miles at least to achieve that status..a B58 may require say 10-30 miles.
To come back to the point a B58 may do a lot better than an old iron block 2 litre unit![]()
That seems to make logical sense to me, thanks.The.Analyst said:The original question and it’s answer is more moderated by the advances in technology rather than size.
For example a S54 engine in a M Zed has a cast iron block and no complex heat management systems.
In contrast a B58 engine has an alloy block, complex heat management, insulation on the engine etc etc
A generalisation is that you should ideally only operate an engine where you can reach the nominal operating oil temperature plus a period of time to burn off the pollutants that accumulating the oil prior to reaching normal oil temperature.
Therefore the engine when shutdown will have its moisture driven out of both the oil and its actual engine.
So a S54 may require say 25-50 miles at least to achieve that status..a B58 may require say 10-30 miles.
To come back to the point a B58 may do a lot better than an old iron block 2 litre unit
Pondrew said:That seems to make logical sense to me, thanks.The.Analyst said:The original question and it’s answer is more moderated by the advances in technology rather than size.
For example a S54 engine in a M Zed has a cast iron block and no complex heat management systems.
In contrast a B58 engine has an alloy block, complex heat management, insulation on the engine etc etc
A generalisation is that you should ideally only operate an engine where you can reach the nominal operating oil temperature plus a period of time to burn off the pollutants that accumulating the oil prior to reaching normal oil temperature.
Therefore the engine when shutdown will have its moisture driven out of both the oil and its actual engine.
So a S54 may require say 25-50 miles at least to achieve that status..a B58 may require say 10-30 miles.
To come back to the point a B58 may do a lot better than an old iron block 2 litre unit
So is the consensus that it's not the size of the engine, but the efficiency of it's heat management that's more important?
So does the size of the engine affect the efficiency of the heat management?Smartbear said:Pondrew said:That seems to make logical sense to me, thanks.The.Analyst said:The original question and it’s answer is more moderated by the advances in technology rather than size.
For example a S54 engine in a M Zed has a cast iron block and no complex heat management systems.
In contrast a B58 engine has an alloy block, complex heat management, insulation on the engine etc etc
A generalisation is that you should ideally only operate an engine where you can reach the nominal operating oil temperature plus a period of time to burn off the pollutants that accumulating the oil prior to reaching normal oil temperature.
Therefore the engine when shutdown will have its moisture driven out of both the oil and its actual engine.
So a S54 may require say 25-50 miles at least to achieve that status..a B58 may require say 10-30 miles.
To come back to the point a B58 may do a lot better than an old iron block 2 litre unit
So is the consensus that it's not the size of the engine, but the efficiency of it's heat management that's more important?
What about engines with equal modern heat management but one small/one large? That’s still not really answered the original query? :?
Rob
Probably. The reason for the original question, though, is I'm thinking of buying a very high performance big engined car, so don't know if this negates anything.buzyg said:I think most average drivers put less strain on a bigger more powerful engine, that they do a smaller capacity engine. For a whole host of reasons. Fuel economy being one.