Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Cars engines that 'turn off' when in stationary traffic
- This topic has 155 replies, 55 voices, and was last updated 11 years ago by BenHouldsworth.
-
Cars engines that 'turn off' when in stationary traffic
-
tinman66Free Member
What the hell do you do with your starter motors to be concerned about replacing them on a regular basis?
I’ve never had to replace one in 20 years of driving.
We have stop / start on the wife’s car and works great apart from the very occasional moment when if you try and start it just as its stopped it takes a couple of seconds.
For me this isn’t even a concern.
OmarLittleFree Memberhow is it when you are turning (particularly going right across the traffic) and you stop/pause for a few seconds waiting for a gap? does the engine cut out and then need to restart again?
molgripsFree MemberI believe it only stops when you put the car in neutral, no?
Or in the case of an auto, it stops when you actually stop, but starts again when you lift off the footbrake so that it’s going by the time you get to the throttle…?
SuiFree MemberYou need ot look at the add packs involved – like i said if you are already using a premium brnad oil then you are in effect using a longer life oil.
You may have emulsifiers (stops the soapy, clouding effect), anitfoaming agents (stops foaming, therfore decreasing the chance of pitting on contact surfaces as you will get air pockets therefore no lubrication), anti oxidant (stops it from oxidising and breaking down, often used with… metal deactivators (metal is a catalyst for oxidation as well, can alos stop the metal from polarising onto surfaces), viscosity modifiers (changes viscosity, i.e. it’s fluidity at certian temperatures under certain conditions, pour point surpresents useful in cold weather, will also affect viscosity- all of the above may or may not be present in “longer life” of “premium brand” oils.
OmarLittleFree Memberthats not too bad then, i’ve never driven a car with auto-stop so wasnt sure how it worked
tinman66Free MemberOmar – ours doesn’t, it only cuts out when the car is put in neutral. Therefore if you stop to turn right and keep it in gear the engine keeps running.
molgripsFree MemberOk so Sui – is Castrol Edge worth it for normal cars? It looks like it lasts well.
SuiFree Memberin a word yes, as is a decent fuel from one of the “majors”. It’s like fairy washing up liquid – poeple can’t be arsed to pay 20pence more per bottle, but will happily buy 10 bottle of shiit vs 1 bottle of fairy – (ok so not strictly the same, but the thought is there).
All, well most, oils are the same base component – Base Ols grades 1-3 (there are others), grades 2 and 3 and a mixture of them are the most common now. The only thing that sets lubs apart is additive packs as breifly explained above -and there is a HUGE amount of work done on this. especially now where bio is in fuel. Diesels in particular as diesel will get past the psiton ring seals and flood the sump, this is a huge problem and additives are trying (allthough not particularly well) to comabt the effect of bio on oil (it emulsifies, sludges) and generally stops working if it’s a cheap one!
trail_ratFree MemberAh yes , i bring up the supermarket fuel issue often and get mocked for tin foil hat effect.
Still not seen anything that convinces me bio is good …..
My mpg is lower , my filter gets sludged quicker ( with my car it noticibly drops power when filters plugging)
Its not even that much cheaper if you look in the right places
molgripsFree MemberImo long life services are the con not the oil.
Why so?
I have used Edge in the Prius btw, it comes out looking basically the same as when it went in. Prius is good to its engine.
Still not seen anything that convinces me bio is good …..
Are you talking about biodiesel? A good way to recycle used cooking oil, not a good use of quality arable land.
SuiFree MemberTR – you are right it’s not Tin Foil Hat stuff – again additives – supermarkets purchase the cheapest of the terminal stuff possible, sans add packs where possible.
this has gone drastically off topic, so to get back on – Start Stop stuff been around for ages, uses different technology to “normal” starters, is on both petrol and diesel, is efficient after X number of seconds,cann imagine it being a right pain in the arris if it goes wrong (which will always happen at the most in opportune moment)
sbobFree Membermolgrips – Member
I get 18k between services.
I also don’t have to service my car regularly enough if I don’t want to.
💡trail_ratFree MemberYep i dont have to change my oil every 10k – nothing tells me too … But i do it because its good for the engine.
And sui it wouldnt be stw if it didmt go drasticly off topic , i expect we will be talking about daily mail readers , ales , whiskys amd woodburners before this topics finished.
sbobFree MemberSui – Member
like i said if you are already using a premium brand oil then you are in effect using a longer life oil.
But the oil I use, which is about as good as you can get, won’t last molgrips’ quoted 18,000 miles.
Cars aren’t expected to last as long any more; gone are the days when I remember no-one in my street owning a new car.
Cars are now disposable.
Which is why molgrips is foolish to think that every new innovation introduced to modern cars is better/more reliable/more economical, which was my original point.molgripsFree MemberI also don’t have to service my car regularly enough if I don’t want to.
You don’t think I should pay attention to the long life service indicator? Do you think it just comes on at a random point that’s more than 10k miles?
Oil degrades quicker under certain conditions than others. Long life servicing measures the oil temperature and engine revs and calculates how long oil is likely to last given the driving you do. If you do lots of motorway miles as I do, it lasts much longer. Which is why I switched to long life schedule.
SuiFree Membermaybe the oil is changed in between 18K??, you’ll also be topping up oil during this period as well. I agree 18K is a very long time for oil to last, but Castrol, Mobile 1 etc will last better (perform better) over this period than a Halfords job.
marcusFree MemberSo to summarise,
Mol, and a few others who have company cars think its ace, because the Engineers say so and / or there isnt a long term financial penalty.
You can mimmick the effect by turning the key on and off or by setting the carb’s up badly
It might be worth the cost if your driving involves lots of ‘long’ stops.But we dont know how long the ‘long’ stop has to be ?
trail_ratFree MemberWat you will find is that by the time the problems occur with your service schedule , it will be long out of warrenty so they dont really give a shite how often you change the oil 🙂
sbobFree Membermolgrips – Member
in the Prius
Ahhh, it suddenly becomes clear. 😆
SuiFree MemberI will add, the Silkolene that you use, as neither of us (unless you work for them) know what add packs are used we cannot be certain that it is any better than others, indeed it may be that others will perform better.
One point to note, if the oil is fully synthetic, then the some of the [important to old engines] hydrocarbon chains have been removed through sever hydroprocessing this can effect seals and potentially cause leakes.
dribblingFree MemberSomething else I’ve remembered; when sat on M62 at a standstill (very rarely), sometimes, with no warning, handbrake button thing/auto-hold thing on and feet not on any pedals, it’ll just start itself up! That’s quite weird.
dribblingFree MemberOh, and..
Cars engines that ‘turn off’ hen in stationary traffic
molgripsFree Membermaybe the oil is changed in between 18K??
No. It does need topping up.
Look, I’ve just activated the long life service schedule. You may think that VW have set this up deliberately to ruin their cars, I don’t though 🙂
in the Prius
Ahhh, it suddenly becomes clear
Er does it? I have two cars, the Prius has had Edge in it when I did the changes, and the Passat is on long life service interval. Not seeing why I’m being stupid here.
Neither is a company car either.
Mol, and a few others who have company cars think its ace, because the Engineers say so
Er should I not listen to the advice from the people who make the car? Engineers don’t know anything do they?
Tom-BFree MemberI did 80k in my last car without a service/oil change. Mitsubishi Space Star. 54 plate. I got 400 quid px last month for it.
speed12Free Memberhow is it when you are turning (particularly going right across the traffic) and you stop/pause for a few seconds waiting for a gap? does the engine cut out and then need to restart again?
A lot of cars with stop start also look at the steering wheel angle and won’t stop if it is turned over a certain amount – means it doesn’t cut out for doing three point turns etc as well.
Which is why molgrips is foolish to think that every new innovation introduced to modern cars is better/more reliable/more economical, which was my original point.
Well….in general they probably are. Otherwise there wouldn’t be that much point in introducing them. OK, a lot are introduced in order to give lower emissions in the test cycles, but that can still be translated to seeing better economy and emissions on the road. Stop start really does have a negligble effect on the starter – a lot use the alternator to start it, and even if it does use a ‘normal’ solenoid starter then as others have said it is hardly a part you are replacing often, if at all anyway so the extra few starts every day are really not going to influence it at all.
Your comment about DMFs is sort of fair enough in that they are probably one of the components with a higher failure rate, but they were introduced in order to satisfy consumers demand for Diesels with a less clattery feel – the component does it’s job perfectly well, but by its very nature is prone to failure faster than a normal flywheel. You can’t have it both ways unfortunately.
traildogFree MemberI would turn my engine on and off when at traffic lights and stopping in queues of traffic. I had my car 14 years and I never had to replace the starter motor. I did have to replace the battery once, which was hardly a huge amount of money. It used to start fine first time even up to the time I passed it on. I’m not sure what ‘bigger and better’ starter systems these cars which automatically do it have but I’m sure they’re up to the job.
I also don’t think that manufactures believe the lifetimes of their cars are really that long and hope most people will get a new one before the bits break. And if they do break, then they’re happy making money for the parts.
Not sure why people would want to sit with a stationary car buring loads of expensive fuel for no reason at all.
bikebouyFree MemberOriginally I had reservations about Hybrid Cars, I thought “oh another fad, here we go” But since buying Percy Prius I have been totally won over. It’s one of the quietist and smoothest cars I’ve driven in a long time. The transition from Leccy to Petrol is so smooth you’d not know it’d happened if it wasn’t for the dashboard telling you it had..
I’ve just test driven one of Lexus’s CT200h’s* and that is another step on from Percy Prius.. You can’t tell what mode the thing is in at all. Quite mental, no it really is. Driving around Tarn you have no idea what mode it’s in and TBH why would you want to know, I mean the cars clever enough to know what mode to play in, I’m just the fat lump in the drivers seat. The transition from Leccy to Petrol, well, it’s seamless. As for driving fast on motorways and the like it’s just like any other car and supposedly you get an extra boost from the Leccy motor if you “kick down”, not that I noticed, but again, why should I.
For that reason, I’m buying one.*The Kyle Car
SuiFree Membermolgrips – Member
maybe the oil is changed in between 18K??
No. It does need topping up.
that was my point, in favour 😉
marcusFree MemberSpeed – I’m interested how they use the alternator. I take it the alternator has a positive connection witht he crank via chain or cogs as apposed to the ‘traditional’ pulley ?
On those sorts of engines, do they fit a ‘traditional’ starter as well ?
Mol – You should listen, just not believe by default.
eruptronFree MemberLonglife oils are used to increase the time between services which is great in theory in reducing the service cost of the modern vehicle. In reality your general punter is oblivious to the fact that in between service time (especially now they have increased) it is his/her responsibility to check various things on there car. But as their generally too bone idle to do so the increase in tyre wear on flat tyres (especially with the current trend in run flats) means increased cost in replaced tyres when they start moaning tyres are not lasting as long. Then the hidden cost extra mpg due to running on under inflated tyres oh and then there’s the safety implications of all these vehicles running round on underinfated tyres.
As for auto stop start it’s a great idea. if your engine runs a 800rpm at idle then if you can switch it off at every opportunity then why worry about the increased wear of a starter motor at a few hundred quid when not only have you saved a shed load on fuel but you’ve stopped a many thousand pound component wearing while your sat at the lights picking your nose 🙂molgripsFree MemberLexus’s CT200h
Like.
Mol – You should listen, just not believe by default.
I spend most of my days reading up about whatever issue I am currently thinking about from as many sources as possible.
Oh and the Passat gives me a nice message on the dash when oil level is low (as opposed to pressure)
speed12Free MemberSpeed – I’m interested how they use the alternator. I take it the alternator has a positive connection witht he crank via chain or cogs as apposed to the ‘traditional’ pulley ?
On those sorts of engines, do they fit a ‘traditional’ starter as well ?
Yeah, it’s called an Integrated Starter Generator (ISG) and is basically an alternator that can also be spun up as well as being spun to generate energy. The connection to the engine is generally still belt drive and is part of the reason they are used as they are much quieter and gentler when re-starting the engine. As mentioned somewhere above, PSA are a big user of them in their stop-start engines (which in turn go in to lots of Ford products [diesels mainly]).
trail_ratFree Member“I spend most of my days reading up about whatever issue I am currently thinking about from as many sources as possible.”
Mean while you normally come up with the most aukward convouluted plan you can to achieve the same task.
speed12Free MemberMol – You should listen, just not believe by default.
I find it quite funny that those who chooses to believe and accept that an engineer has done their job properly in speccing and designing components for a car is the one who is ‘in the wrong’ and those believing that any new technology is some conspiracy to get you to buy more parts is in the right?! Most manufacturers are giving out longer and longer warranties – which generally means they wan’t as little to go wrong as possible. OK, there are some quite complex systems on modern cars but they are still remarkably robust (which I can attest to as part of my job is making sure they are robust!). Of course one should do some research into a new technology, but to say that they only sensible view is a cynical one is a little bit short sighted.
IHNFull MemberMol – You should listen, just not believe by default.
From the man who’s default is to argue, not listen 😉
The topic ‘Cars engines that 'turn off' when in stationary traffic’ is closed to new replies.