5 Things You Should Never Do In A Turbocharged Vehicle

  Рет қаралды 5,339,779

Engineering Explained

Engineering Explained

7 жыл бұрын

5 Things You Should Never Do In A Turbocharged Car
5 Things You Should Never Do Playlist - goo.gl/SxoUi7
Subscribe for new videos every Wednesday! - goo.gl/VZstk7
1. Do not run the engine hard after start-up.
Most people know you should let your engine warm up before running it hard, but many cars only have coolant gauges. Engine oil tends to take longer to heat up, because you don’t have a thermostat like the coolant does, which isolates the coolant in the engine block and regulates its temperature. Oil that isn’t heated up won’t flow as fast as oil at operating condition, which means you’ll have less protection at engine start up. This is especially true for turbocharged vehicles, because you also have oil feeding the bearings of the turbocharger, which spins at insanely high RPM and produces significant heat, so you want to make sure you have proper oil flow through the turbo.
It will be different for every car, but it could be an additional several minutes before your oil temperature is near your engine coolant temperature.
2. Don't shut the car off immediately after running it hard.
You’re going to have hot spots where the engine components, and especially the turbocharger, are still significantly hotter than your engine oil temperature. If you shut off the engine, the oil no longer flows, and thus pockets of the oil are going to be heated up to very high temperatures. These high temperatures break down the oil, and also burn up and evaporate the light end of the oil, leaving behind a heavier oil that won’t have ideal flow characteristics. This reduces your engine oil life, and also means you might have less protection at start-up.
3. Don’t lug the engine. Low Engine Speed, High Load Operations. First, this isn’t ideal because you’re telling your engine to move your vehicle quickly when it’s at a huge gearing disadvantage. Second, when your engine tries to produce more power at low engine speeds, it may be able to inject more fuel, but not ingest enough air. As a result, you’ll have a highly rich mixture and this can lead to poor emissions, damaging your catalytic converter, and seeing black smoke come out your exhaust. Third, regarding damaging your engine, this can cause low speed pre-ignition. LSPI is a when you have pre-ignition of your air fuel mixture (before your spark ignites it) and is becoming a more common phenomenon with small turbocharged engines running at low engine speeds with high load. It’s a dangerous condition that can cause engine damage, such as broken spark plugs or cracked pistons, as a result of extremely high pressures which occur due to significantly advanced ignition timing. It’s also very challenging to detect, and can’t be avoided through ignition timing or changing the spark plug’s heat range.
4. Don't use low octane rating fuel, especially if the car has been modified. Turbocharged cars tend to have higher pressures and temperatures within the combustion chamber, which is why they have reduced compression ratios to compensate. If your car is modified, you can keep it reliable by running a rich mixture and using high quality, high octane fuels. Obviously reducing boost and retarding the engine timing will do this as well, but of course you’ll be reducing performance. There are knock sensors to help minimize any engine problems, and so they’ll retard timing if it senses knock will occur.
5. Don’t floor it coming out of a corner.
In this one I just wanted an excuse to talk about slip angles. Turbocharged cars have some varying amount of turbo lag, new ones are much better. My point is this, as you’re coming out of a corner, your tires have some loading on them, whether your car is FWD, RWD, whatever. Now this doesn’t apply to AWD quite as much, but it’s still an issue. Your car’s stability is a result of your front tire slip angles being nearly identical to your rear tires slip angles. So long as this is true, your car moves on its targeted path. If you floor a turbocharged car, especially cars with high amounts of turbo lag, you get slammed with torque fairly surprisingly. This shock of torque increases the demand of the driven tires, increasing their slip angle. If you have a significant increase of slip angle of just one set of tires, front or rear, you end up with understeer for FWD, or oversteer for RWD. All of this is to say that your throttle application exiting the corner is very important, especially in 2WD turbo vehicles, where turbo lag can easily cause an understeer or oversteer situation.
And don't forget to check out my other pages below!
Facebook: / engineeringexplained
Official Website: www.howdoesacarwork.com
Twitter: / jasonfenske13
Instagram: / engineeringexplained
Car Throttle: www.carthrottle.com/user/engi...
EE Extra: / @engineeringexplainede...
NEW VIDEO EVERY WEDNESDAY!

Пікірлер: 5 100
@gureno19
@gureno19 3 жыл бұрын
I always ensure i warm up my engine each morning by dropping a brick on the accelerator and leaving it to warm up for 5mins or so.
@ratface1399
@ratface1399 3 жыл бұрын
And if it gets too warm then you replace the air filter with a 🌭
@Direct.injection212
@Direct.injection212 3 жыл бұрын
Clay or concrete brick? Lol
@fazeobama4162
@fazeobama4162 3 жыл бұрын
Steel brick
@TheFelt13
@TheFelt13 3 жыл бұрын
Haha 😂😂😆😆😆😆 funniest comment I've ever read about cars
@Bob-nu3xe
@Bob-nu3xe 3 жыл бұрын
haha so much for stop start! manufacturers trying to save fuel lol Ps is a brick an optional extra in the brochure ?
@votzmitvgeschrieben
@votzmitvgeschrieben 3 жыл бұрын
Never drive away and forgot your turbocharger on the kitchen table.
@STEALTH1USA
@STEALTH1USA 3 жыл бұрын
Dude, love the profile name. Lol
@phorzer32
@phorzer32 3 жыл бұрын
Asbestos
@voltaoltav4686
@voltaoltav4686 3 жыл бұрын
I did it ine time... Didnt go well
@aliggamer7251
@aliggamer7251 3 жыл бұрын
Max Headroom damn, happen to you too man??
@grantmills4184
@grantmills4184 3 жыл бұрын
@@aliggamer7251 happened to my buddy Eric
@carlbeane9227
@carlbeane9227 3 жыл бұрын
I redirected my exhaust back into the intake for double the boost!
@shizzlil
@shizzlil 3 жыл бұрын
Woah
@jakubkrcma
@jakubkrcma 3 жыл бұрын
I suggest a secondary exhaust cooler. :-))))
3 жыл бұрын
throttle response must be abysmal…
@colin_deans
@colin_deans 3 жыл бұрын
It's Big Brain Time
@leebroadbent1340
@leebroadbent1340 3 жыл бұрын
I redirected my exhaust inside the car so as not to waste any gases 👍🏼👍🏼
@thewedge8823
@thewedge8823 4 жыл бұрын
never drive a turbocharged vehicle underwater.
@thingsofpassionwithrali6259
@thingsofpassionwithrali6259 3 жыл бұрын
@Jordan Winders 😁😁i
@mixup2216
@mixup2216 3 жыл бұрын
Hey 420 likes _nice_
@user-vx8te1id8r
@user-vx8te1id8r 3 жыл бұрын
Mixup 221 421* ;)
@aliggamer7251
@aliggamer7251 3 жыл бұрын
The Wedge really, rubbish. I drive mine from Australia to the USA once a year underwater and it works fine
@carlbeane9227
@carlbeane9227 3 жыл бұрын
Duh. You have to turn the turbo around backwards first. Dumbass
@copperkeyracing6167
@copperkeyracing6167 3 жыл бұрын
Let me shed some light on these things, from an actual Engineer that designs these cars... 1. True for any car, let the engine oil warm up before putting a lot of strain on the engine, aka flooring it and revving the engine out. 2. True for Turbo cars, you want the Turbo to cool down to prevent damage to the turbo, in the case that you have been running the car hard and you want to turn the car off immediately. This is only the case when you are track driving the car, or being really hard on the car on the street due to traffic, or just being in a huge hurry. 3. Not true about not "lugging" the engine. Engines are designed to be able to simply step on it while in gear on the highway. Be it a a high gear or low gear. The Fuel that you mention that "injects a ton" into the engine... Not true at all. The fuel is tuned to exactly what is best for the engine given any scenario. Your foot does not control the fuel, the computer does. Out of boost, at full throttle the engine will be sending fuel, per the computer, which would be between 12.5 to 11.5 AFR. Engines respond better, the cooler they are, using the greater amount of fuel of 11.5 AFR, the only reason they would be at 12.5 is to try to save fuel. So, its actually the opposite in this scenario, your engine may be lean, not rich... but again, safe for the engine of course. If you see black smoke out the back, its because the computer saw knock/pre-ignition, due to poor maintenance or poor fuel quality (same thing really), pulled timing, pulled the throttle in the case of electronic throttle, and then dumped a ton of fuel to further protect the engine. This means you need to do your intake valve cleaning maintenance by hand, or drop some cleaner in it. DIY, if you know what you are doing. Doesn't matte how good quality of fuel you think you are using, if it is getting mixed with carbon/oil deposits in the engine, the best high octane fuel (premium 91-93oct) will be reduced to much lower octane, worse than the lowest octane you can ever find. 4. Use the fuel that the car has been designed for, this is for any car. If it's modified, and the engine computer was re-tuned to take only Premium. Use only Premium. If the manufacturer states to use regular, use regular, don't use anything else, you won't hurt the engine, but you aren't doing your wallet or performance any favors. If the manufacturer states you can use both, then the higher octane is better and gives better performance, but regular is ok and you can save money just make sure and do your maintenance. If the manufacturer states to use premium, then use only premium. You could damage the engine if you use less than premium, if not in the short run, then in the long run. 5. Flooring it in a turn, sure, but that's with any car. You need to learn the car, and what its driving characteristics are. This is just being a good driver. Not specifically for a turbo car, or a muscle car, exotic, or a budget car. Any car, and all cars, have their limits. In summary, for Turbo cars, of the 5 things Jason states to not do to Turbo cars, only Number 2 is specific to turbo cars, and the rest applies to all cars. Turbo cars: Let the turbo cool down, before turning it off when you have just driven the car really hard. Obviously, a car without a turbo, you don't have to worry about a turbo cooling down, since you don't have one. All cars: Let the engine warm up before going hard on it, do your maintenance to your car or the engine/transmission/brakes/etc/etc will blow up, use the proper fuel, learn the car gradually before you decide to drive it hard and try to push it to its limits or you'll find yourself in an accident. Special Note: Maintenance of the intake valves is critical to a turbo car, so stay on top of your intake valve cleaning maintenance, or your engine WILL BLOW UP! Maintenance is important to all cars, but for turbo cars, the engine is extra sensitive to its internal cleaning maintenance. If you don't maintain it, expect reduced performance, and expect to be selling the car very soon with a broken engine that you prefer not to pay for. I've seen this time and time again. I can go into great detail on how and why this occurs, and how modern cars have this issue but older cars do not, but I degress.
@louarmstrong6128
@louarmstrong6128 2 жыл бұрын
I read your comment. I am a beginner DIYer. What do you mean by intake valve maintenance? I have never taken off a valve cover? Sorry for such a novice question.
@copperkeyracing6167
@copperkeyracing6167 2 жыл бұрын
​@@louarmstrong6128 To clean the intake valves, you don't need to remove intake valve covers. The valves are like upside down lolly-pops, except with the circle facing down not facing you, and the stem going straight up. Under the valve cover you can get to the stem, but not the face of the valve. What you want to clean is the face of the valve [and the back of the face] which is in the air path. Before we continue on the explanation, you have to also understand that when your valves begin to get dirty, that's when buildup/cleaning is strictly contained [and needed] at the valves. It is rare to catch it this early. BUT, that's what the cleaning is called, intake valve cleaning. What you want to clean, is not just the intake valves, where the buildup begins, but also everything behind the intake valve all the way out the tailpipe of your car. Intake is where the air comes in, and the buildup begins there, then it continues to run and buildup all the way through the system (engine, exhaust manifold, turbo [if you have one], exhaust system, then finally tailpipe). Intake valve cleaning is a misconception, when what is actually needed is the entire system cleaned beginning at the intake valves... but, many people understand and have heard of intake valve cleaning. Also, once everything is clean, you want to maintain the vehicle by keeping up with the cleaning before it builds up, and that is simply cleaning the intake valves at that point. So, clean it all once, then maintain it by just cleaning the valves. The cleaning procedure is all the same. Now, to continue on how to clean EVERYTHING, not just the intake valves. This is where you will have to study further, or wait till I make a video myself, as it seems that no one has a complete comprehensive how-to on it. But, I'm sure this sounds extremely labor intensive and complicated... So, to get you started, what you want to use a liquid cleaner. Its really not labor intensive or complicated, with a liquid cleaner. Look up how to use seafoam. There are many products that can do the cleaning, but all the comparison tests I've seen on breaking down carbon buildup on valves, shows seafoam to be best. Also, in my experience, seafoam has been the best. Don't use the Walmart knockoff that sits right next to it on the shelf, it's not as good. Seafoam cleaning. Study it. A few last words of wisdom. The white smoke that comes out your tailpipe when you're doing the cleaning procedure, that's carbon buildup. When it comes out a faint blue, that's the seafoam. Do one cleaning procedure at a time, and as a check, do another cleaning procedure and see if it comes out a faint blue. If no white smoke, just blue, then no more cleaning procedures needed. Each cleaning procedure, requires one bottle of seafoam. I've seen as many as 20 cleaning procedures needed before you get no white, all faint blue. The car gained about 100hp from doing the procedure... and no more knock, and risk of blowing up. Yeah, you could lose about half your hp when its so bad, its about to blow up... or it can blow up sooner, have oil consumption issues, etc etc.
@louarmstrong6128
@louarmstrong6128 2 жыл бұрын
@@copperkeyracing6167 Boy did I ever hit the holy grail of responses ...I appreciate the the time and experience you put into this, I will have to sit down tonight to fully absorb this....awesome and thank you again
@copperkeyracing6167
@copperkeyracing6167 2 жыл бұрын
@@louarmstrong6128 you're welcome
@portuguesepetrolhead
@portuguesepetrolhead 2 жыл бұрын
Valuable feedback yours, thank you; however, point 3 is not straight forward in any of both directions. More to the point, it's not even specific to turbocharged cars - although agree that the mentioned fuel issue is impossible with electronic fuel injection. Know some of engines where full throttle between 1-1,5k rpm in top gear produces quite unpleasant vibrations, due to (I assume) unfavourable physics (inertia and natural vibration frequencies). Both my father's 2016 Fiesta Ecoboost 125 (turbocharged) and my own 2004 SLK 230 (supercharged) or 2011 Delta 1.6 diesel (turbocharged) suffer from this problem. Doing the same in my 2010 Panda 1.2 (N/A), 2004 CL 55 (supercharged) or 2001-3 SLK 200 (supercharged) feels - and sounds - totally fine. VW group's 2019-21 1.0 TSI 95 (Polo, Ibiza, Arona) also doesn't "complain" much. Interesting the difference between the SLKs. Basically, ithey have the same engine, but their character is quite different - the 200 are way smoother than the 230. Read similar reports between Merc's M112 2.6L and 3.2L... Slightly aburd topic anyway, because for quick acceleration it is obvious that a lower gear should be used.
@gyffjogofl7676
@gyffjogofl7676 5 жыл бұрын
I usually redline my engine as soon as I start it.
@Maxi_jedd
@Maxi_jedd 5 жыл бұрын
🤦🏽‍♂️ 🤣
@a.b.c4069
@a.b.c4069 5 жыл бұрын
is your head cracked yet?
@peepingsid2096
@peepingsid2096 5 жыл бұрын
Lol 😆
@r6master69
@r6master69 4 жыл бұрын
Me too. Especially on super cold days. It's great for longevity
@Jack-zo5gt
@Jack-zo5gt 4 жыл бұрын
gyff jogofl Actually did it yesterday in my Golf, got the AC pressure checked, took longer than I’d realised so I left, pulled up and some traffic lights around the corner, put it into sport and was going to drag race an Octavia (clear road there’s nothing around there). Foot down hit the top end of 1st gear and it made the most awful noise I’ve ever heard from a car. Fair to say I’ll be more vigilant about temps in future.
@bobriley000444
@bobriley000444 5 жыл бұрын
police: why were you going so fast? > EE told me i can't use this car at low-rpm
@GrrMeister
@GrrMeister 5 жыл бұрын
*I was unable to get into **_'Top Gear'_** under 100 MPH as I have a 7 speed gearbox*
@pinytenis420
@pinytenis420 4 жыл бұрын
@Elliot Rodger that's the Honda way and im proud to say im part of it 2nd and on is for pussies
@fchanMSI
@fchanMSI 4 жыл бұрын
I also saving the environment
@alyx6427
@alyx6427 4 жыл бұрын
JUSES CHIRST aren't diesels usually turbochargered as well, and they usually stay at low rpm
@the_batmobile0.4
@the_batmobile0.4 4 жыл бұрын
Lol
@dt3963
@dt3963 3 жыл бұрын
When opening your hood to check your oil/filters, be extremely careful not to look directly at your turbo. If you make directly eyeline contact with your turbo it may instantly explode, sending shards of turbo into your face and killing you and possibly your entire family that might be standing behind you.
@finn7530
@finn7530 2 жыл бұрын
it’s true this happened to me
@samuelelder9434
@samuelelder9434 2 жыл бұрын
@@finn7530 i confirm.. i went to your funeral
@_recognize
@_recognize 2 жыл бұрын
I AM DEAD LMFAPO
@dickdastardly5534
@dickdastardly5534 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been killed five times by doing this - you’d think I would learn from it 😐
@dinolizard5647
@dinolizard5647 2 жыл бұрын
Can confirm
@brokencondom329
@brokencondom329 7 жыл бұрын
never put a carrot in your turbo
@mspenrice
@mspenrice 6 жыл бұрын
Unless, of course, you drive a Rabbit.
@FalconXE302
@FalconXE302 6 жыл бұрын
Never let an Engineer try to tell you how to drive your computer controlled car. They think computers are full of tiny gears and levers...!
@bryanwhite3021
@bryanwhite3021 6 жыл бұрын
Explain
@miamijohndoe2517
@miamijohndoe2517 6 жыл бұрын
Broken Condom Loool
@Ethan007Hacks
@Ethan007Hacks 5 жыл бұрын
quality meme
@dus10r
@dus10r 3 жыл бұрын
The old “dont turn your car off right after running it hard” was a characteristic of 80’s and 90’s turbo cars, hence people installing Turbo Timers. Modern Turbo cars including Subaru’s now continue to circulate oil even after you turn it off. Some cars like Audi’s have electric pumps that continue to run even after you turn them off. That tip is for old school turbo cars.
@SniperReady
@SniperReady 3 жыл бұрын
I can hear the pump working when I turn off the engine in my Golf R. It sounds like a little robot, like a service droid making things okay
@nathandorrington9517
@nathandorrington9517 3 жыл бұрын
dus10r , do you know if parking on a slop( driveway) will damage the turbo due to the oils shifting due to angle of parked car? I move it to flat ground for a few minutes before i start it and let it warm up just to be safe. ('13 Wrx)
@dus10r
@dus10r 3 жыл бұрын
Nathan Dorrington slope shouldn’t hurt them, the turbos actually have a small sump that holds the oil in place even when on a slope. And just starting it doesn’t put a lot of stress on the bearing. Turbos are high rpm low torque and they’re balanced really well so there’s not a lot of wear on tear on the bearing. New turbos are WAY better engineered than they used to be.
@ryanslattery2977
@ryanslattery2977 3 жыл бұрын
@@SniperReady you know, I always wondered what that electric motor sounding noise was whenever I turned off my GTI.
@SniperReady
@SniperReady 3 жыл бұрын
Ryan Slattery it’s your droid beep booping your turbo
@angrybirdsandy5041
@angrybirdsandy5041 5 жыл бұрын
Next he’ll be telling me NOT to use my ejector seat while driving through a tunnel 🙄🙄🙄
@johnnysins1400
@johnnysins1400 4 жыл бұрын
AngryBirds Andy ejecto seato cuz
@windmillman
@windmillman 4 жыл бұрын
Too soon Hector err..junior
@R3alC0zy1
@R3alC0zy1 4 жыл бұрын
Hey you ill take my cutter back .
@tigermoth61
@tigermoth61 3 жыл бұрын
I did that once, my Mum hasn't been the same since.
@5THR33S
@5THR33S 3 жыл бұрын
Oh boy do I love sending significant loads to my rear tires
@ratface1399
@ratface1399 3 жыл бұрын
I love significant loads🌭👅
@PipelineF35guy
@PipelineF35guy 3 жыл бұрын
@@ratface1399 gaaaaaaay
@robbie121981
@robbie121981 5 жыл бұрын
This is crap, the real 5 things not to do in a Turbo car. 1. Dont eat hamburgers while driving, especially if u give it a hit and turbo lag kicks in hard as youll drop your burger, and make a mess. 2. Concentrate on the road and not on the hot babes that are checking out your car especially when the blow off valve is going off as u might crash into stuff. 3. Dont bone more then two girls at a time in the car as you will get a head ache from your head hitting the roof as its tight in there. 4. Dont practice drifting after 10pm around the Liverpool area cause i live there and need to sleep for work next day. (U know who u are) 5. Dont keep your drugs in the centre console cause thats the first place the pigs check. These here tips will keep you rollin allot longer and staying out of jail or the cemetery.
@glennt1962
@glennt1962 5 жыл бұрын
Zonlander 😂🤣😀 I’m with you man.
@mosestanjy
@mosestanjy 5 жыл бұрын
the turbo flutter is not caused by the blow off valve please read up on it before pretending to know anything
@yinzer_412_
@yinzer_412_ 5 жыл бұрын
@@mosestanjy did he mention turbo flutter?
@mosestanjy
@mosestanjy 5 жыл бұрын
@@yinzer_412_ point 2
@NewLondonMarshall
@NewLondonMarshall 5 жыл бұрын
Moses Tan I think he meant blow-off valve whilst having the turbo but not the turbo flutter itself, but I’m confused now as well haha
@krenkosenforcer
@krenkosenforcer 5 жыл бұрын
So wait. After listening to why I "shouldn't" floor it coming out of a corner, I swear you've just explained exactly why I *should* floor it!
@coolk9dogs
@coolk9dogs 4 жыл бұрын
The down side is we buy more tires well got to spend money to have fun lol and it's worth it to lol
@MartinFnGolej
@MartinFnGolej 4 жыл бұрын
I usually brake into corner, downshift on entry and floor it on the way out. WTCC style ;)
@750turbojoe
@750turbojoe 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I knew it wasn't just me feeling that way!
@750turbojoe
@750turbojoe 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I knew it wasn't just me feeling that way!
@s550andrew
@s550andrew 4 жыл бұрын
Fn. that’s the way to do it 😎
@macwoodfleet8721
@macwoodfleet8721 4 жыл бұрын
I use bricks to keep my car redlining all the time while i am asleep. Each morning my oil thanks me, but i get embarrassed and douse the engine in ice water because i am scared of relationships.
@fders938
@fders938 2 жыл бұрын
Even better would be to pour some water into the intake because you don't want the engine to dry out while it's kept warm overnight.
@DrDLightful
@DrDLightful 2 жыл бұрын
That's interesting you mention low speed pre ignition. When I was in college for autonotive and advamced engine performance, we talked in depth about how there are more and more instances of GDI turbo engines succumbing to "superknock" as we called it. We saw several engines come in with rods and pistons through the side of the block. It seems to happen when people are just driving and tip into the throttle a bit, suddenly the engine locks up. Snapshot of PID data when the check engine light comes on has indicated that these types of engines are perfectly fine and operating at low speed, high load and all of a sudden something happens right after the fuel pressure rises but right before it makes the change from stratified charge to homogenous mode. Tests have been done and the hypothesis is that when you tip into the throttle the fuel pressure goes up, spraying in more fuel, and that fuel hits a hot spot and detonates. I read about tests where pressure transducers have recorded 2500-3000 psi in the combustion chamber before the piston reaches top dead center, shattering the piston.
@markrandles2822
@markrandles2822 5 жыл бұрын
Today I learned i could clip my gas cap into the inside of the fuel door.
@mackenziepeek9317
@mackenziepeek9317 4 жыл бұрын
Wait. You have a gas cap
@Tony-tk4ht
@Tony-tk4ht 4 жыл бұрын
You have a gas tank?
@MrJackfriday
@MrJackfriday 4 жыл бұрын
The car uses gas?
@evanbutland2061
@evanbutland2061 4 жыл бұрын
You have a car?
@zachary2641
@zachary2641 4 жыл бұрын
My car doesn't have a cap holder thing
@ZippyTPinhead
@ZippyTPinhead 7 жыл бұрын
I am in my early 50's have been interested in cars for a long time.Thank you for the clear explanations your channel gives. It clears up a lot of myths that develop over time.
@newground1341
@newground1341 3 жыл бұрын
These comments man 😂 I’m picking up on some strong sarcasm
@doreenlee9304
@doreenlee9304 3 жыл бұрын
LoL same
@nikhilb4516
@nikhilb4516 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great detailing. I’am learning a lot from all your videos I’ve watched so far.
@CarlizWang
@CarlizWang 6 жыл бұрын
Love your videos on "Things you should never do..." However after watching them all I am now too scared to even touch my car without it blowing up XD
@dylanberry7822
@dylanberry7822 6 жыл бұрын
Something I always loved about my 335i monitored oil instead of coolant temp.
@lytheus69
@lytheus69 3 жыл бұрын
this
@zaafirahmad1853
@zaafirahmad1853 3 жыл бұрын
literally thinking the exact same thing
@MiraSubieGirl
@MiraSubieGirl 3 жыл бұрын
Bmw result: Coolant overheats instead 😅
@MiraSubieGirl
@MiraSubieGirl 3 жыл бұрын
Relax ive had 11... love em 👌🏻
@kilovwdude6457
@kilovwdude6457 3 жыл бұрын
My A3 has that love it
@HorrorbleGamer
@HorrorbleGamer 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, you're really informative bro. I have an Opel Adam and it's turbo charged. The car rattles when I floor it at a low rev and I never understood why or even that the revs were relevant until now. Thanks for saving me alot of future repairs.
@ronarndt6722
@ronarndt6722 4 жыл бұрын
Good video. Just thought I'd chime in and FWIW, you mentioned about "pre-ignition" / pre-detonation especially at low RPMs with high load. Pre-ignition can occur for multiple reasons, however, one common area that is usually not looked at right away is vacuum leaks that lean out the A/F ratio. While it's true you can get a little more "giddy-up" on a lean burning engine, the lean can cause ping or pre-detination. What does this have to do with low RPM / high load? High load places more air in the cylinders and at low RPM (retarded ignition) this can "lean-out" the A/F ratio in the cylinder and in turn, may create the the same "lean-burn" condition as a vacuum leak. In short, as you indicated, "Turbo" boost at the appropriate time and RPM.
@enelgee
@enelgee 7 жыл бұрын
The low rpm and high boost will more than likely only affect drivers of manual vehicles. Automatic vehicles will downshift once you squeeze that gas pedal.
@dan428
@dan428 7 жыл бұрын
That's true
@myar4931
@myar4931 7 жыл бұрын
You would think an automatic would downshift, but I don't trust them to do so when I need it. That's why I seldom ever risk overtaking on two-lane highways when driving automatics. I've missed too many passing windows simply because the cars refused to downshift, even when I floored the pedal, or if it did, it took too long.
@MG3R
@MG3R 7 жыл бұрын
sounds like your car having some gearbox sensor issue, you should go and get it checked by experienced workshop and change the sensor. i got mine changed and it downshifts beautifully everafter, something missed for a long time
@bandnerdo2000
@bandnerdo2000 7 жыл бұрын
he was only talking to non wimps I believe
@nukkythompson419
@nukkythompson419 2 жыл бұрын
lol automatic Vehicles? why are you here
@tominator227
@tominator227 7 жыл бұрын
ok guys, I´m a car guy and I "care" about my car, but please don´t forget to use your car. That´s what it was made for in the first place... it´s a machine, not your girlfriend ( or boyfriend ) that deserves all the love and care you have to offer
@mountaincarjunkie3307
@mountaincarjunkie3307 5 жыл бұрын
I mean, sure, if you don't want your car living past 100k and you want to replace engines all the time go for it.
@beatsbybrandon902
@beatsbybrandon902 5 жыл бұрын
Don't tell me how to live my life
@abrahamsmith3440
@abrahamsmith3440 5 жыл бұрын
Humans disappoint me
@kareemmehdi
@kareemmehdi 5 жыл бұрын
Spudonaut Robert every modern car has no problem making it to 100K just change your oil and don’t beat the living hell out of it and you’ll be good
@BrawndoTarrlyton
@BrawndoTarrlyton 5 жыл бұрын
Nice try mechanic, no $500 blinker fluid replacement for you- I know your ways.
@claudea79
@claudea79 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent engineering explanations especially for turbo cars! Well explained and narrated! Thank you!
@jazedftw1108
@jazedftw1108 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the great explanation. My BMW 120d had issues when flooring it at low revs under 2000 and it would shut off full power. It gave a drivetrain error and the power got reduced to like 100hp instead of 225. (ECU Remap) I never understood the problem but now I know I have to ease in the throttle. Thanks engineering explained. You do a great job!
@pinytenis420
@pinytenis420 4 жыл бұрын
Nah bruh you downshift thats what he's trying to say it sounds like you have a bigger problem on your hands 😂 i lug my prelude every once and awhile in traffic or whatever and never had any issue like what your explaining lol
@syedreza8722
@syedreza8722 7 жыл бұрын
Always impressed by your knowledge and your means of explanation. As a teacher, I applaud you my man.
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@RedTurbocar
@RedTurbocar 7 жыл бұрын
half of the things you said are incorrect
@sebastiansaxon
@sebastiansaxon 7 жыл бұрын
+Mr Ornelas thanks for the chuckle
@RedTurbocar
@RedTurbocar 7 жыл бұрын
+Mr Ornelas HA. what points did I make?
@RedTurbocar
@RedTurbocar 7 жыл бұрын
+Mr Ornelas HA. what points did I make?
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
PS - sold the car on Monday! This will be the last video of my personal Subaru STI.
@alexchulzhanov
@alexchulzhanov 7 жыл бұрын
Congrats! I hope the new owner takes care of it well.
@Soma-7662
@Soma-7662 7 жыл бұрын
Any idea what your new car would be?
@balajichandrasekaran6312
@balajichandrasekaran6312 7 жыл бұрын
how pressure of diesel is increased from 1 bar to 2500 bar by Fuel pump in CRDI system?
@joewrx8153
@joewrx8153 7 жыл бұрын
Oh no u sold it 😩😩😩
@balajichandrasekaran6312
@balajichandrasekaran6312 7 жыл бұрын
your reaction to " 2017 Porsche 911 Carrera video from Motor Trend" ? #TurboRant
@MrNeeeooo
@MrNeeeooo 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jason Keep up the fantastic work , I really admire your enthusiasm and the way you conduct yourself so professionally! The quality of your videos and your explanations are so Insightful, i have a learnt a lot from you, thank you! I have shared this video clip and one other to the Vitara owners group in the UK and hopefully they find it informative too . Wishing you all the best for 2022 , take care and stay safe , kind regards Neoklis
@GokantheHusky
@GokantheHusky 3 жыл бұрын
I have a 2002 WRX and this is helpful. My car is in for a timing belt change. And I will definitely follow these advices.
@ImyurZero
@ImyurZero 7 жыл бұрын
Unless your car has an auxiliary coolant pump that continues to run coolant to the turbo charger after the car has been shut off to prevent any issues. Thanks VW!
@ethanjohnson3418
@ethanjohnson3418 7 жыл бұрын
And BMW. And Audi. And Mercedes. And almost any modern turbo car that has a performance turbo.
@thamadflava
@thamadflava 7 жыл бұрын
+Ethan Johnson except for Subaru, because Subaru, you know...
@inkno701
@inkno701 7 жыл бұрын
Yeah but Subaru's just use science instead of a pump. Their turbos are oil and water cooled so the coolant will continue to circulate even after shutting off the engine because of thermal siphoning. That's why turbo Subaru's have an extra coolant reservoir above the turbo at a higher point in the coolant system then the radiator.
@wolf0491
@wolf0491 7 жыл бұрын
Yeah I drive an EVO and found after I got out my car one day that it still sounded like it was running. I wasn't particularly driving hard that day either. I don't know the exact conditions that must be met for car to do this as I have only had it happen maybe 3 times over the year but it will keep running until it cools down. I usually do sit in my driveway with it running after I get home too so thought it was strange first time it happened.
@Josh-nt3fo
@Josh-nt3fo 7 жыл бұрын
That doesn't mean you should just shut off your engine after running it hard. Even in engines without a turbocharger, it's wise to let things cool down for a little bit and let temperatures even out, let parts seat evenly, etc. as they cool.
@115zombiehuger
@115zombiehuger 7 жыл бұрын
A lot of the things pointed out in this video only apply to older turbo charged vehicles.
@justclik6578
@justclik6578 7 жыл бұрын
I want to give this comment one millions likes. Way to go giving 30 yr old advice in a new car...
@SethPowell7
@SethPowell7 7 жыл бұрын
this.
@howardjboone7065
@howardjboone7065 7 жыл бұрын
+FLnative dead on, computer controlled cars and he giving 1980 theory
@stoatythesecond888
@stoatythesecond888 7 жыл бұрын
Aside from letting the oil heat up, but that applies to all vehicles
@justclik6578
@justclik6578 7 жыл бұрын
+Rich Smit actually flat fours have the same tq/hp split as a domestic v8. Unless you're modding for torque alone, the two numbers are normally within 10% of each other. 300hp/300tq at the wheels is very common. I don't think that Jetta can do that can it?
@danielhan7638
@danielhan7638 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for actually writing down the 5 points in the Description. You're the first person to do that in a while, instead of just plugging in whatever :D
@BlueMax333
@BlueMax333 5 жыл бұрын
Have been driving for over 30 years but did not know about lugging the engine. Valuable advice. Thanks!
@bEEBO178
@bEEBO178 Жыл бұрын
Think of all the engines you ruined up until this point :)
@link6032
@link6032 7 жыл бұрын
Not sure what you mean regarding 'lugging' causing the engine to run rich and damage the engine and cat. That is nonsense, modern fuel injection engines control mixture based on engine load, AFR, map etc, the won't allow a engine to run excessively lean or rich. You might have your foot flat to the floor, requesting full power but the ecu will give you what is safe, that means not allowing it to run dangerously rich. Imagine the warranty claims if owners could actually damage their engine buy driving round in a too low gear and the ECU allowing rich mixtures which kill the cat !!!
@Nezz609
@Nezz609 7 жыл бұрын
I have a mazdaspeed 3 which has a fairly modern direct injection engine and this is a known problem among them. Everyone will tell you to never floor the car under 3000 Rpm.
@mituc
@mituc 7 жыл бұрын
In our mazdaspeeds one of the "problems" (which also results in a lot of fun) is the offset between the center of the crank and the rods, which results into stupidly more torque than similar engines. With the factory insta-spool turbos and some poor tuning the rods can bend or crack in no time.
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
Most people drive automatics, which require very little effort from the driver in order to keep things reliable. (Example, floor it in a high gear and it downshifts). You can easily damage a manual vehicle if you don't know what you're doing. Burn up the clutch, damage the gears in a launch, cause LSPI. Engines will run rich at high load/high gear (low speed) because it's safer to do so. Running rich greatly reduces the chance of LSPI or knock.
@link6032
@link6032 7 жыл бұрын
+Engineering Explained I agree ECUs will run rich over lean, that again is a safety feature, in the same way it will pull out ignition timing to prevent pre ignition (knock). Yes of course bad drivers can damage a car with too much clutch slip, poor gear changes brake the gearbox etc etc, but the ECU will prevent incorrect mixtures regardless of what the driver does. If your scenario of low gear acceleration did cause damage due to fuelling that would indicate the ECU couldn't adjust fuel and ignition to keep the AFR and timing under control, which clearly isn't the case. The fact that the same car can reliably operate at high and low altitudes and hot and cold climates means the ECUs have a range of parameters it can adjust to account for external factors whilst keeping everything safe. Catering for the changes in temperature, fuel quality, altitude etc etc which a car sold globally has to cope with is far more complex than people not changing gear early enough.
@mituc
@mituc 7 жыл бұрын
MJ W LSPI starts happening usually when there are hot spots in the cylinder or on the piston. Especially DI engines will produce a lot of soot which is aggravated by low RPM high load situations when the mixture is enriched. Over time that soot clogs onthe piston crown (also helped by poor gas quality, extended service intervals, frequent short trips with a cold engine, and so on). That is something that the ECU cannot control and can't prevent either because it's not post spark ignition, is just a spontaneous phenomenon.
@JohnLemieux
@JohnLemieux 5 жыл бұрын
5:50 OMG I NEVER KNEW THERE WAS A SPOT TO PUT THE GAS CAP WHEN YOURE FILLING UP MY MIND IS BLOWN
@brissoNQ
@brissoNQ 5 жыл бұрын
John Lemieux L
@billydarley6925
@billydarley6925 5 жыл бұрын
i filled up my car today for the first time since i bought it and saw the spot for the cap but didnt know how to use it so i didnt bother. it has a tether anyways.
@BobO-zo2bi
@BobO-zo2bi 5 жыл бұрын
Ha, mine doesn’t come with a gas cap
@a.b.c4069
@a.b.c4069 5 жыл бұрын
bunch of dumbasses
@peterbustin2683
@peterbustin2683 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I buy 50 at a time and leave them on petrol pumps so the local boyz can throw them at the police...
@DakotaJSkidds
@DakotaJSkidds 3 жыл бұрын
E15 in my cruze and it loves it! I average 34mpg vs 31 in 87. I am tuned from BNR and using their modified 87 tune
@CrazyPetez
@CrazyPetez 4 жыл бұрын
As the owner of a new Ford Edge ST, I really enjoyed this video. Very timely for me.
@CL9k24a3
@CL9k24a3 7 жыл бұрын
I have Placebocharged car, does ths apply to my car ??
@nizarawawdeh4142
@nizarawawdeh4142 7 жыл бұрын
+Dustin Dryden that was really funny lol. I actually believed it with all the tire squeal
@zloychechen5150
@zloychechen5150 7 жыл бұрын
oh, so that's you who everyone has fun with!
@zloychechen5150
@zloychechen5150 7 жыл бұрын
sadness-aspirated
@CL9k24a3
@CL9k24a3 7 жыл бұрын
+zloychechen5150 placebocharging is real... now my 1.3 orion makes 800whp and it can make as much as I wish.
@kodenich
@kodenich 7 жыл бұрын
I once bought a whistle that clamped onto my exhaust that made a whistling sound when the exhaust pressure was high. It was super lame. Then it fell off.
@hackneo64
@hackneo64 7 жыл бұрын
My GTI still runs the oil pump for the turbo after the engine is shut off so it doesn't burn out the bearings in the turbo. Newer cars dont need to be kept on after your done driving.
@DarkVoidDan
@DarkVoidDan 7 жыл бұрын
Yeah same on my old scooby.
@SethPowell7
@SethPowell7 7 жыл бұрын
same here, turbo is coolant cooled and doesn't need to be run at the end of the trip.
@elmin2323
@elmin2323 7 жыл бұрын
Yer all new cars are fine pretty much all cars have turbos now ie golfs and Ford Focus and they have auto stop at the lights!
@sil8127
@sil8127 7 жыл бұрын
+elmin2323 I never even considered that, good point!
@dimosk7389
@dimosk7389 7 жыл бұрын
It's still a good idea to cool your car down. It's not just the turbo that gets stressed.
@davidburton-richardson9516
@davidburton-richardson9516 9 ай бұрын
Excellent video and information. It's much what I do anyway when driving my Turbo Car but I notice that most people do not.
@JulianFuller001
@JulianFuller001 7 жыл бұрын
I'm not an engineer. But I am a professional driver. If you floor the accelerator pedal at low RPM in a manual vehicle, nothing immediately happens to the boost, neither will it damage the engine. The accelerator will open the butterfly in the throttle body to allow more air, the computer will measure how much air is being forced into the engine per stroke and inject the required amount of fuel to achieve a clean burn as predetermined by the ECUs' fuel-air mixture mapping. This results in increased engine speed which correlates to increased exhaust gas flow which in turn increases the rpm of the turbo which THEN increases the boost pressure incrementally as the engine gains speed until peak boost is reached and the wastegate is actuated. What you're referring to is called laboring the engine, which is only 'undesirable' as it won't actually damage anything other than the drivers' pride if they don't compensate for the lack of power at low RPM in a high load scenario and actually stall the vehicle. The most common high load scenarios encountered would be driving on an incline, or attempting to overtake without downshifting. The same applies to N/A vehicles as well. This would be better classified as one of your pet hates, not an actual 'do not do'. (you may be referring to the thermodynamic efficiency of a gasoline engine and its relativity to combustion efficiency in a high load scenario, which is something completely different and has more to do with fuel efficiency than any damage that might occur)
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
+Julian Fuller laboring your engine can cause LSPI and damage your engine. Owners manuals will suggest against it for this very reason. Here's an explanation: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/qdV6mMRo3avYXWw.html
@JulianFuller001
@JulianFuller001 7 жыл бұрын
Engineering Explained I know what LSPI is. However, due to design parameters of engines, actual damage resulting from LSPI to a vehicle straight off the showroom floor would be a rare occurrence. There is more risk when owners begin modifying engines and changing the operating parameters. I took the time to watch the clip you posted out of courtesy, and if you were really honest, your argument is presented along the same lines as "if you go outside your chances of being stuck by lightning are higher than if you stay inside." Especially considering the report indicated that the circumstances would need to be 'just right'. Laboring an engine is more a poor behavioural issue. The same as failure to indicate also increases the risk of being involved in a collision and thereby resulting in vehicle damage. Looks like we'll be keeping seperate opinions on this one.
@allannichols9864
@allannichols9864 6 жыл бұрын
Exactly and he also claimed engine RPM limits the amount of air an enjine can injest. This makes even less sense considering we are talking turbo cars which pressurize the intake and are ramming air in at a set psi.
@another3997
@another3997 6 жыл бұрын
Allan Nichols Maybe your enGine can't inGest much because you filled it up with drop many "J"s?
@MattMaudsley
@MattMaudsley 6 жыл бұрын
None of us know the proprietary alloys that are used for performance and on the other hand to save money in new or older turbo charged cars. Sure the same factory may make a specific part for many companies, but it is made according to the formula given to them by the car manufacturer. There is no wide brush to cover everything in a general way. If there were racing would be easy. We want to say do this one thing for every car, but that is not the reality. Even the same parts in same model cars with a little tweak can behave quite differently. Premium fuel certainly has more energy in a the same general volume, but weather your car is sensitive to that or not again depends on your cars particular collection of parts.The closer the Octane rings are together for the right air mixture and ignition will give more power. HIgher altitude gas stations offer a wide range ot octane strings to accomodate different cars at different altitudes with different turbos, no turbos, or just different parts that work differently in concert together. "we all will fail at something, so make sure it is at something you enjoy!"
@Ultrabenbooyah
@Ultrabenbooyah 7 жыл бұрын
Catalytic converter? What catalytic converter?? ;D
@jakesimm5889
@jakesimm5889 7 жыл бұрын
Does it make you feel good sending an unnecessary amount of pollutants into the atmosphere?
@Ultrabenbooyah
@Ultrabenbooyah 7 жыл бұрын
Jacob Simmons You're probably right, that's why I bought a very expensive sport cat instead of a decat pipe. But MANY owners of turbocharged cars just decat their cars. Many modern petrol cars are quite clean even without cats, though.
@Russell9111
@Russell9111 7 жыл бұрын
+Balls Deep that's what I'm saying
@DarkChasmGamers
@DarkChasmGamers 7 жыл бұрын
+john doe What a great way to care for your kid's future
@TadGhostal
@TadGhostal 7 жыл бұрын
yes
@buffplums
@buffplums 4 жыл бұрын
Some excellent advice as usual from this gentleman
@cactuscanuck6802
@cactuscanuck6802 3 жыл бұрын
He mentioned using the best gas for turbo engines; also make sure to use "top tier" gas or some other type with high quality cleaning agents in it. Super important for all modern, high output engines
@MasterBait1
@MasterBait1 7 жыл бұрын
whoever buys the car second hand from you gets a very well protected car I'd say
@tornut24
@tornut24 7 жыл бұрын
+2kwik L*l *'ve n*ver he*rd th*t *ne b*fore
@Getfuqqedfedboy
@Getfuqqedfedboy 7 жыл бұрын
+2kwik I wish I understood this logic.... were we watching the same video....
@uavpilot6715
@uavpilot6715 7 жыл бұрын
Oh man!! That answer was the best!!!
@bullet_tooth_tony
@bullet_tooth_tony 7 жыл бұрын
new owner will definitely discover new jokes: - knock-knock! - who's there? - it me, 4th cylinder :)
@XenoEXTornado
@XenoEXTornado 7 жыл бұрын
+TIMOSHINA 🙄
@corybrim7524
@corybrim7524 7 жыл бұрын
"We got some big sticks in the road." Had me laughing. I love that you find time for some humor here and there.
@claudiadavies5110
@claudiadavies5110 3 жыл бұрын
Another excellent and informative video, thanks heaps!
@deere3321
@deere3321 Жыл бұрын
Years ago we had a VW diesel turbo. My wife drove it to work which was about 8 miles. Rarely was it driven at highway speeds. After 2 years, a new turbo, intake cleaning and finally a rebuilt transmission, it was time to trade.
@Mile3500
@Mile3500 6 жыл бұрын
Thank you for writing the list in the description!
@mattywollaston3996
@mattywollaston3996 6 жыл бұрын
Great vid mate, and extremely informative.
@Ray-xy6zn
@Ray-xy6zn 4 ай бұрын
I just got my first turbocharged car and wanted to understand the science behind driving. Thanks for helping me get a little closer. For the alg
@eh2341
@eh2341 4 жыл бұрын
That is a beautiful road ! (Good advice, too)
@salsathe4th
@salsathe4th 7 жыл бұрын
I've done all of these.....whoops
@Nanorisk
@Nanorisk 7 жыл бұрын
Achievement unlocked: living dangerously (15p)
@TorutheRedFox
@TorutheRedFox 7 жыл бұрын
-_-
@kadajawi6567
@kadajawi6567 7 жыл бұрын
Oops indeed. To be honest I'm used to flooring the engine and shifting early. Oh well. Time to change that.
@Vatsyayana87
@Vatsyayana87 7 жыл бұрын
how could you be flooring it and early shifting? im guessing you mean at different times?? That just sounds like your not treating your car very well lol
@kadajawi6567
@kadajawi6567 7 жыл бұрын
Basically I fully press the accelerator (without kick down, and the pedal is set to eco, so it is a bit gentler) starting from say 1100 rpm, and shift at 1500-1600 rpm, rinse repeat. I suppose that's not how you should do it... I'll try to keep it in mind.
@Papa7Bravo
@Papa7Bravo 7 жыл бұрын
you're talking about lugging in a diesel an saying that it will inject more fuel and it's bad? huh? they're mapped ECU' you can floor it at 1000 rpm and it will refer to the load chart mapped in the ecu and inject the right amount of fuel for that rpm. You're then on about to not power out of the corner, it's logical, you can do that with a regular car that's non turbo, you have grip then get into the powerband and it starts to slip.
@dieselmutt8865
@dieselmutt8865 7 жыл бұрын
That's what I has thinking. The ECU is going to control AFR's under any condition you could drive the engine. My VW TSI runs low rpms through the automatic trans and mimic diesel like power out of a gas engine. Knock sensors are going to correct any mis-givings.
@RennieAsh
@RennieAsh 7 жыл бұрын
Turbo lag is more extreme though ;p
@Papa7Bravo
@Papa7Bravo 7 жыл бұрын
+Rennie Ash in some cases yeah, but it's not something you 'shouldn't do' I swear that EE is just saying it as a 'filler' to make the video longer.
@Papa7Bravo
@Papa7Bravo 7 жыл бұрын
+diesel mutt88 also about having to buy the more expensive site fuel for a turbo car, that's is a heck load of BS, y out will only have a difference in power and unless you have a car that is ultimately tuned for one type of fuel, you will not notice a difference.
@DIgitusSmartas
@DIgitusSmartas 7 жыл бұрын
He should have said never to put lesser octane fuel in your car than the one it was tuned on by a manufacturer, it is even written in cars manuals. My car was tuned from factory on 95 octane but I have never filled 95 only 98 octane or at one stage they had 100 octane fuel (98 petrol +10% ethanol mixture) at certain pumps but its not sold anymore so I just add few litres of e85 on top of 98 octane. Once its modified it is tuned to one type of fuel but some car have the ability to have maps for 2 fuel types say e85 and 98 where you can switch from one to another
@Samon187
@Samon187 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for the informative videos :D
@geraldmyers6605
@geraldmyers6605 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the educational and informal explanations to how modern and older vehicles work from a engineers point of view
@Deej-85
@Deej-85 6 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love your videos. It's nice to be able to totally agree on everything you say.. Iv always told others about loading up an engine at low rpm. It's just an unnecessary pressure on everything Inc clutch and gearbox. Also like the part of about warming up the oil before thrashing.. Some of my work colleagues can't get out of the car park fast enough in the mornings even when it's -5° some hitting the redline.. I place bets on who's going to need an engine replacement first lol
@andrewt.5567
@andrewt.5567 Жыл бұрын
Realistically, probably none of you. Body rusts out before engine is dead on pretty much every car in my region.
@thangnguyen02
@thangnguyen02 3 жыл бұрын
Appreciation the info. I suggest you guys watching his hole video as it contains many useful pieces of info as well as explanations. 1) Not running the engine hard until engine oil is warmed up - which can take some time. Don't rely on the cooling gauge. Wait a few minutes after coolant is warmed up. 2) Not immediately shut up the engine right after a trip. Let it cool down by avoid the boost before shutting it off. 3) Avoid high load at low engine RPM. (Which btw, how do you avoid in an automatic like a CR-V? I can't downshift.) 4) Use the best fuel (highest octane) 5) Don't floor it right after a corner. (Joy kill for me. Ugh. Don't think it matters w/ my tiny CR-V though)
@OscarHernandez-jk5nc
@OscarHernandez-jk5nc 2 жыл бұрын
hey im a little late but i think you're ok with #3 because the auto will downshift for you
@trogers2120
@trogers2120 4 жыл бұрын
interesting and knowledgable video! My diesel has a dpf (filters out the black soot) and I noticed during more highway driving, I was hitting the gas more in 6th instead of downshifting since diesel cars have more low end torque, and I realised that my car was doing more dpf regens (car self cleans the dpf so it doesn't clog, basically burning off the residue that forms inside the dpf), but now that i'm doing more city driving and never really hitting the gas hard at low rpm, I drove it for almost 3 weeks before it did a regen, whereas with more highway driving than city driving, I was sometimes doing 2 dpf regens a week. Good to know since the dpf regen kills like 30hp whenever it's doing it making the car almost sluggish to respond/drive.....
@couchwarrior2449
@couchwarrior2449 2 жыл бұрын
My 1.8L turbo Jetta pinged bad on 87 octane. Switched to Shell Vpower 91and it runs like a champ. Better to pay at the pump than at the mechanic shop.
@Sevalecan
@Sevalecan 7 жыл бұрын
Never? 2003 VW Jetta TDI. There's an oil heater/cooler connected to the coolant lines, so oil temp should always be close to engine temp. There's no preignition because a diesel is intended to have ignition right when the fuel is injected. And I'm not so sure about the richened mixture to the catalytic converter being a problem, because the rich mixture at low RPMs could've been optimized out in the ECU by the manufacturer if it were something that'd cause a lot of problems.
@Whinzey
@Whinzey 5 жыл бұрын
1 thing you should do to not damage your car. DON'T drive the car at all!
@Presence_of_Mind_
@Presence_of_Mind_ 4 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure certain components actually go bad faster when not used
@spyrosbellos2522
@spyrosbellos2522 4 жыл бұрын
just dont buy the car in the first place😂😂
@TheOzthewiz
@TheOzthewiz 4 жыл бұрын
Also, a REALLY good way to save on gas!
@michaelblakemore3712
@michaelblakemore3712 2 жыл бұрын
@@Presence_of_Mind_ some ferrari owners got really angry because their batteries kept going, so ferrari just told them to drive it more. ferrari never learns lol.
@ryancaverly2882
@ryancaverly2882 3 жыл бұрын
Nice video, learned a lot, thanks
@spenserholen419
@spenserholen419 2 жыл бұрын
One of the best roads out there! My favorite on that strip is Latourell Falls. Thanks for a great video.
@Pulverrostmannen
@Pulverrostmannen 2 жыл бұрын
Fun part of the Subaru Diesel I got is that the shift indicator pretty much tells you to run your engine at the low revs high load condition all the time. it even use more fuel than just shifting down and up the revs a bit. I never run the engine on the low revs that introduces the heavy vibrations since I know it´s not good to do so
@TestECull
@TestECull 7 жыл бұрын
On point two, you missed the main reason not to shut one out like that: Turbo spooldown. Turbos spool at ridiculous speeds. Over a hundred thousand RPM for smaller ones is not uncommon. They rely on engine oil flow to stay alive and if they're not given a few moments to spool down on engine shutdown they'll cook their bearings in no time flat.
@mimike80
@mimike80 7 жыл бұрын
give me a example of someone who does not let their turbo spool down before turning it off. last I checked, you get off your gas pedal. who would boost their turbos to spool up and then turn the car off?? phuuuk you mean?
@mimike80
@mimike80 7 жыл бұрын
TestECull you got to be a assclown to turn your car off in less than 3 seconds after boosting. Never heard of such a thing.
@TestECull
@TestECull 7 жыл бұрын
mimike80 It's not boosting. It's *any* driving. Even puttering down the road at 1700RPM is enough to get the turbos spinning fast enough that their lifespans are drastically shortened without being allowed to fully spool down first. Why are you resisting so hard the idea that you can save yourself a few thousand dollars every 2 years by waiting an extra 3-5 seconds before shutting the engine down?
@mimike80
@mimike80 7 жыл бұрын
TestECull false. Ridiculous. Who does that.
@101Volts
@101Volts 7 жыл бұрын
Is it just me or do you have the other impression here? When I put my Diesel (6.5, Turbo) in Park or Neutral the RPMs go up for a second or two then they go down. I can't say I know for sure if that's the turbo but it does happen.
@bonifacemwangi2599
@bonifacemwangi2599 3 жыл бұрын
Informative...your the best sir....have learned alot of things
@butchfajardo8832
@butchfajardo8832 2 жыл бұрын
So an oil temperature gauge is very important! Thanks for the info!
@stoyantenev7819
@stoyantenev7819 11 ай бұрын
Fun fact for the author himself: Most cars that are equipped with oil cooler (typicaly if it has forced induction chances are it has oil cooler too), also have OIL thermostat which serves for cutting the oil off of the oil cooler, making it get hotter sooner than normal :)
@nthgth
@nthgth 10 ай бұрын
That's really cool! And good to know
@metallica01032010
@metallica01032010 6 жыл бұрын
A great video for EE: How altitude affects the performance of internal combustion engines? NA, turbocharged and supercharged
@sabarishmv8603
@sabarishmv8603 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent video
@41BeachComber
@41BeachComber 4 жыл бұрын
Interesting information. Thanks.
@benob6746
@benob6746 6 жыл бұрын
You have the same voice like Ross from Friends :D
@kinangeagle133
@kinangeagle133 4 жыл бұрын
This is where “down a gear, disappear” actually exist for once
@aciddiver1978
@aciddiver1978 Жыл бұрын
I changed from 95 octane to shell v power 98 octane in opel insignia 1.5 petrol 195 hp. Remarkable difference. Engine runs better, better fuel economy, more responcive etc.
@jeffjackson9679
@jeffjackson9679 3 жыл бұрын
Most modern turbo charged cars don't require "cool down", as they are liquid cooled, and that coolant keeps flowing through to prevent the oil from coking. But I remember the crappy old Pontiac 301 turbos requiring owners to do this. Most owners didn't and those turbos would crap out before the car had even 50k miles on them.
@oscarmvl
@oscarmvl 7 жыл бұрын
Good to know, now I'm only missing the turbocharged car :'D
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
Hey, me too!
@joemilton7552
@joemilton7552 7 жыл бұрын
So you sold the STI, do you have your LS1 swapped miata replacement yet??
@43shadows
@43shadows 7 жыл бұрын
Also knock sensors will adjust timing to fix the knock to avoid damage.
@geraldfordman7474
@geraldfordman7474 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks again for driver safety and operational driving tips. You're so right. I get more boost by easing the throttle out of turn rather than flooring it. Also, thanks to you I'm careful not to lug the engine out of first gear. Besides, burning rubber from a stop at low rpm is stressful especially when you have to rev it at 3000 rpm to get the necessary torque. Once I get passed first then it starts to rocket and that's fun enough. Thanks again for operational safety tips. And oh by the way Jason, I just installed the K&N HP air filter and am quite happy with it. Just the sound alone told me it was making a difference. The jiffy lube guys were revving it when one guy said, "hey what kind of car is that? I took it as a complement.
@chris.5434
@chris.5434 2 жыл бұрын
😂
@johnconstantine635
@johnconstantine635 5 жыл бұрын
Love this video, alot info thanks.
@goodlyboony
@goodlyboony 7 жыл бұрын
basically, you can't have fun
@bloodking35
@bloodking35 7 жыл бұрын
fun is expensive
@goodlyboony
@goodlyboony 7 жыл бұрын
Lidiot Lee Quote of the century XD
@dilithium72
@dilithium72 7 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I don't know anyone who bought these kinds of cars for their economical running costs and cheap parts! I certainly didn't.
@goodlyboony
@goodlyboony 7 жыл бұрын
dilithium72 And what you said is relevant to my comment because?
@mackcummy4976
@mackcummy4976 7 жыл бұрын
Fast cheap ad reliable, you can't have all three.
@vincento1067
@vincento1067 5 жыл бұрын
Your in the Columbia gorge, in Oregon! I have been on this old Columbia hwy...
@libertyvirtual3985
@libertyvirtual3985 Жыл бұрын
Very True, my oil in my Audi A5 burns way too fast, A5 cabriolet. I mess up the turbo. Every time I down shift the computer will spit out a RPM warning.. I was driving it like my A6 v6. Now I drive the A5 like an eggshell, slow turtle. I now understand. Thanks so much for this info.
@Johnn_T
@Johnn_T 9 ай бұрын
Nothing under 98 octane in mine. Im amazed to be alive at a time when someone has to make a video about this!!! You forgot to mention Bore-Washing with excess unburnt fuel too. No complaints about your video, but I'm just amazed to be alive in a time where people know so little about turbo engine basics that it justifies making a video that gets a lot of hits!! I can only imagine today's generation in the turbos from the 1980s that didn't run ballbearings and instead ran bronze bushes , and everybody had a turbo timer!! Really wasn't that long ago either!
@promethiousb1489
@promethiousb1489 11 ай бұрын
Great video man,,useful info...
@StrahinjaRadinovic
@StrahinjaRadinovic 3 жыл бұрын
Much more love for n/a engines❤️
@NapoleonDynamite69
@NapoleonDynamite69 3 жыл бұрын
Right after we turbo them.
@craigjones8319
@craigjones8319 Жыл бұрын
Said no one ... Ever
@chrismiller7866
@chrismiller7866 7 жыл бұрын
So #3, don't roll coal??
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
Haha, I think that much was obvious. :)
@BMWAddictE90
@BMWAddictE90 7 жыл бұрын
No. Don't be a douche
@chrismiller7866
@chrismiller7866 7 жыл бұрын
+Engineering Explained Was that more for the fact it actually messes the engine, or for the dick factor?
@Sens23Bruins
@Sens23Bruins 7 жыл бұрын
straight pipe it and roll coal all day bahd
@EngineeringExplained
@EngineeringExplained 7 жыл бұрын
I'd imagine most of them are straight piped, so the exhaust is probably fine. I wouldn't be thrilled with someone dumping gasoline into a river. Equally, I'm not impressed by someone pointlessly dumping carbon/diesel emissions into our air.
@tpv59
@tpv59 4 жыл бұрын
EXCELLENT. As Always. Always!
@edwinremudaro7953
@edwinremudaro7953 4 жыл бұрын
Great tips. Tks
@gearsofwar3xXx
@gearsofwar3xXx 2 жыл бұрын
Keeping the oil changed in a turbo car is even more important than in a non-turbo.
@marioelburro1492
@marioelburro1492 9 ай бұрын
Frr
@Montblanc1986
@Montblanc1986 7 жыл бұрын
so you never enjoyed any power slides in that car?
@macky5066
@macky5066 7 жыл бұрын
LoooL
@MXL.14
@MXL.14 7 жыл бұрын
power sliding is gay, luckily I have N/A v8 to drift tf out of :D
@zloychechen5150
@zloychechen5150 7 жыл бұрын
wat?
@zloychechen5150
@zloychechen5150 7 жыл бұрын
Kevin Eichelberg he says he's gay.
@seanlawrence7081
@seanlawrence7081 7 жыл бұрын
you're subscribed to pewdiepie @mexalkid , you probably aren't even old enough to drive
@omakis965
@omakis965 3 жыл бұрын
Great info thanks!
@timg3199
@timg3199 3 жыл бұрын
On corners I do a rev match downshift and floor it just before the road straightens out, and it is fun. I slid a little once when it was raining, but I was pushing the limits of physics that day.
@cbyhvyeng
@cbyhvyeng 4 жыл бұрын
Big fan of this channel. Though, the coolant and oil temperature relationship depends on how the design engineers were allowed to design the car based on trade-offs (I'm one too). Meaning, there may be automotive manufacturers who have further evaluated this risk for the benefit of the consumer (prior SAAB no GM?). This video might be considered correct for basic European and American cars.
@realbigtuna667
@realbigtuna667 2 жыл бұрын
5 years later and here we are with most new turbo 4 cyl cars using trans programming that intentionally lugs the engine to meet fuel economy and emissions standards.
@nthgth
@nthgth 10 ай бұрын
Is anyone surprised that the "standards" are actively killing engines now? 😒 It wasn't enough that 2000s engines - including V-8s - were squeaky clean compared to when the EPA was formed and when smog was a thing. Nor that lots of people drive hybrids and EVs by choice so any damage is further mitigated.
@Rusty_trombone62
@Rusty_trombone62 4 жыл бұрын
I’m speaking for 91-99 Mitsubishi 3000gt Vr4 models And 1991-1996 Dodge Stealth R/T TT twin turbo. 1) you should always drive with an aftermarket oil temperature gauge because cool oil is way too thick to push through these small turbos the high oil pressure will cause your turbos to blow its seals and o rings making the turbos blow oil. 2) you definitely want an aftermarket boost gauge because the stock boost gauge in the dashboard is not connected to the turbos at all. It’s an engine load gauge with a signal from the ecu. 3) install a digital wideband oxygen sensor and gauge because the stock intercooler pipes tend to leak causing a dangerous leak situation. Even one of the 28 year old little vacuum hoses can dry rot crack causing a vacuum leak also causing a dangerous lean condition that can lead to knock (detonation) in the engine. 4) nothing lower then 93 octane fuel if you wanna keep the engine alive. Lower octane fuel causes knock even under normal driving conditions. Knock is the #2 engine killer. No oil is number one. 5) check under the car. Look at the circle ⭕️ outdation of the oil pan and make absolutely sure that there is not a single dent in and part of the oil pan. Especially near that circle area. Any dent in the oil pan is a ticking time bomb 💣 for the engine because the engine oil pickup sits literally 2 millimeters or less from the bottom of that oil pan and the slightest dent is causing major oil starvation to the main and rod bearings. Park the car and don’t start it again till you get the dent fixed. It’s very easy to fix and can be done on a day off from work. Jack and support the car on jack stands and make sure it’s safe for you to be under it. Remove the downpipe, remove the starter, drain the transfer case oil, remove the transfer case. And just let it sit on something padded on the ground still connected to the driveshaft, drain the engine oil, remove the oil filter, remove the turbo drain lines, buy new gaskets,remove all the oil pan bolts, use a oil pan gasket splitter (they sell it at advance Auto Parts) to split the gasket surface without bending the pan itself, remove the oil pan, inspect the oil pickup for damage replace it if it’s damaged, use something oval shape to hammer out the dent. (I use an old EGR valve as a chisel). Afterward clean all the old gasket sealer off and apply a thin coat of either Genuine Mitsubishi RTV sealant around the entire mating surface of the oil pan. If you can’t get the Mitsubishi sealant then I use “the right stuff” RTV all the time with great results. And reverse the sequence, install a new Genuine Mitsubishi oil filter and from now on only use a Mitsubishi dealership oil filter. I’m hey are $5.15 and are the best oil filter you can use in this car. The bypass valves never fail or collapse. Refill the engine oil and transfer case oils.dont forget to install the turbo oil drain lines with new gaskets. Install everything else. Start up and check for leaks. Congratulations 🎊 you just added years to your engine’s lifetime. 6) inspect the timing belt once a month at least. The upper timing covet has 2 10mm bolts and is very simply to access. Change everything at the very first sight of slack in the belt, cracks, oil on the belt, water pump leaking, pulley noise, or you just got the car and don’t know when it was last changed. It’s an easy job but all the timing components absolutely have to be genuine Mitsubishi parts. Especially that tensioner adjuster I’ve seen cars come to me with that Chinese made eBay tensioner fail on initial startup and when that fails it takes the heads, valves, and sometimes the pistons with it because it’s an interference engine and this is why we have to have that only the best attitude when it comes to timing belt components. The only exception to this is if you make big power like myself I use the gates racing blue Kevlar timing belt that is 100 times stronger then the Mitsubishi oem belt. But it’s very expensive well over $200. So you really don’t need it. 7) every once in a while spray the wastegate actuator Rods with WD-40 because they get dirty and rusty and will sometimes get stuck. And you don’t wanna be riding around wide open gate on stock internals without the proper tune. 8) remove and inspect the stock ecu for leaking capacitors or burned circuits. If found have the unit rebuilt or consider a tune able chrome ecu like s Jesters unit. 9) that’s about all I can think about for now. Just take care if these cars because they are a dying breed and the value has doubled since 2013.
@zachariassebastian9301
@zachariassebastian9301 4 жыл бұрын
Superb content!
How To Make Your Modern Turbo Engine Last Longer | Are They Less Reliable?
19:01
5 Reasons You Shouldn't Care About Horsepower (As Much)
14:44
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 973 М.
Sigma Girl Education #sigma #viral #comedy
00:16
CRAZY GREAPA
Рет қаралды 55 МЛН
5 Things You Should Never Do In A Manual Transmission Vehicle
8:32
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 12 МЛН
Why You Should Never Lug Your Engine (Especially Turbos)
9:13
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 931 М.
TURBO FLUTTER and BLOW OFF VALVES explained in DETAIL - BOOST SCHOOL #8
15:29
driving 4 answers
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
5 Reasons You Shouldn't Buy A Turbocharged Car
11:31
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 1,3 МЛН
5 Things You Should NEVER Do In A Turbocharged Vehicle!!
8:50
Bros FOURR Speed
Рет қаралды 4,7 М.
When To Shift Gears For The Best Fuel Economy
8:46
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 2,4 МЛН
Money Shifting The 2023 Nissan Z - What Happens?!
10:50
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Will Thinner Oils Damage Your Engine?
12:40
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 3,7 МЛН
5 Things You Should Never Do In A Dual Clutch Transmission Vehicle
7:34
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
When To Shift Gears For The Fastest Acceleration
8:40
Engineering Explained
Рет қаралды 1,6 МЛН
Как работает танковый разворот на BYD U8 за 250000$?
0:54
Семён Сляднев | 54REGION
Рет қаралды 3,9 МЛН
Drifts that Keep Getting Longer ^^
0:16
Cole Trotta
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
Ох уж эти современные автомобили 🤔😁
0:59
Суворкин Сергей
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
ДАЛЬНОБОЙ ЖЕСТКО ЩЕМИТ ОБОЧЕЧНИКОВ #shorts
1:00
Вольвист 73
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Мы победили БМВ! Мотор шепчет, а владелец без денег :(
1:41:42
ИЛЬДАР АВТО-ПОДБОР
Рет қаралды 3,7 МЛН
Un poco de suerte la del sr perro 😮 - Rally Santafesino
0:10
Nanci Torres
Рет қаралды 22 МЛН
Вибрация при Запуске.  #юмор
0:41
GRESS
Рет қаралды 1,8 МЛН