Coldest temperature you have started your car in?
Jan 28, 2010 at 10:09 PM Thread Starter Post #1 of 35

Foshizzle

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Inspired by the "How to properly warm up a vehicle" and "The outside temperature"-threads and the fact that we've had a long cold spell here in Finland for over a month I thought I'd check how well your cars are starting in the cold.

My -96 VW Golf started yesterday in -25c (-13F) without the block heater plugged in. I think my previous -87 VW Polo started in similar temperatures without block heater, I'm sure it started in -20c (-4F) atleast.

I don't have free parking close to my apartment so I have my car parked about 150m away on the side of the street so even if I have a block heater there is no electrical outlet for me to use so I can't use it half of the time, poor car.
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Jan 28, 2010 at 10:22 PM Post #3 of 35
I was very happy one morning in Helena Montana at o-dark-thirty when it was -50F. My block heater paid for itself that day!
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Jan 28, 2010 at 10:24 PM Post #4 of 35
'95 Sidekick at -30 degrees F
'01 Cherokee Sport at -45 degrees F
'09 Wrangler Sahara at -55 degrees F

All three cars were fully winterized with block heaters and auto-starts.

I've operated cars at near -70 degrees F but never had to start them at that temperature.
 
Jan 28, 2010 at 10:25 PM Post #5 of 35
-25C sounds not far off what cars were started in when I visited Ketchikan some years ago. One would start the car with the heater on max and let it warm up while one had breakfast. There was no choice if you didn't want to be there for hours trying to scrape ice off the windscreen.
 
Jan 28, 2010 at 10:45 PM Post #7 of 35
Quote:

Originally Posted by Currawong /img/forum/go_quote.gif
-25C sounds not far off what cars were started in when I visited Ketchikan some years ago. One would start the car with the heater on max and let it warm up while one had breakfast. There was no choice if you didn't want to be there for hours trying to scrape ice off the windscreen.


Just about right. Try any other way in an Alaskan winter and you're looking at unpleasant driving to your destination, be it rigid tires, cold engine block, cold interior of frozen doors and windshields.
 
Jan 28, 2010 at 10:47 PM Post #8 of 35
Quote:

Originally Posted by fatcat28037 /img/forum/go_quote.gif
Kalamazoo, MI 1989 Isuzu pickup, parked ouside, no block heater, -19'F. It started but it really didn't want to.


I would have bet on the cold winning that battle
 
Jan 29, 2010 at 12:18 AM Post #10 of 35
About 10 below zero (F) out in central Oregon, no block heater. This was in a '95 Ford Escort. It started up and ran, no problem. That was a good little car.
 
Jan 29, 2010 at 12:19 AM Post #11 of 35
Coldest was -27F. I also managed to lock my keys in the car that day, with the engine running. Took me 20 minutes to get back into the car, by which time my face was pretty much frozen.
 
Jan 29, 2010 at 2:20 AM Post #13 of 35
Hyundai Santa-Fe at -45C which is around -50F. It's right around the point where Celsius and Farenheit meet anyway. We have a block heater but weren't able to use it due to where we were parked. Luckily it was quite new at the time and it actually surprised us by starting!
 

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