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Originally Posted by
Beaker
I've built a few race engines and bought a few new cars,
Always run them in the same
- NEVER drive them cold - you have cast iron, aluminium, chrommolly, brass and a bunch of other metals in there all designed to have exacting tollarances at operating temperature, all metals expand at different rates - driving it cold WILL wear stuff premeturely its that simple - that goes for run in and afterward - it also applies to gearboxes and diffs - I love watching people warm up their race cars engine then flogging the crap out of them and then watching them halfway through the day replacing the diff. FWIW you won't glaze a bore by giving the engine 2 or 3 minutes to warm up.
- Drive it with load, but don't rev the crap out of it, you have tight tollerances everywhere and the oil needs to be able to clear the surfaces, at high revs you have the same oil pressure as at medium revs, meaning you are working your oil needlessly, change speeds, change gears etc give it a range of driving conditions up to about 800 - 900 km, then you can start to work it a little harder, after about 1500km you can start to flog the crap out of it if you like.
- Modern turbo's don't generaly need to be cooled down, having said that if you've just been flogging the daylights out of it, I would.
- Change the oil after 1500 - 2000km - it WILL be full of crap.
I know a few people I raced against who used to flog their engines from day one also believing the 'flog it or get a slug' theory - I can't recall many having more grunt, and while I've never had a DNF due to an engine failure some of them have.
Our Navara had 300000km on it when some prick pinched it. My Patrol has 150000km on it and the engine is like new, my VR4 had over 250000km on it when I sold it and it ran like a champion.
Run it in how you like, its your car, but I'll keep running in mine as above, I'm yet to have an issue doing it that way.
When I need to run in an engine, I normaly just take it for a full day drive, in my case I've taken the last four for a run down the Clyde Mountin to the coast, south along the coast to Bega and then home via the Brown Mountain. That is just about enough to run in a car and gives you everything you need in terms of terrain and speed changes and its a fun drive to boot.
I do agree that you need to give an engine a ahrd time occasionaly and that a vehicle NEVER driven hard will be a dog, but I save that for after the first 1K or so.
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