DANG, it's cold!
When do you think a block heater is necessary? The high temp for today was somewhere in the 3's... OK, maybe 10 or so... but it was COLD! Tonight they are calling for -25 windchills and a high of 7 for tomorrow. When I started my truck this morning ('06 1500 5.7) the power steering pump complained a lot, and there was a noticible extra tick coming from under the hood. I also noticed that the truck surged a little when I started it, barely noticible.
What are your cold weather care tips? ... ... Besides "get a garage" (not in the budget)
What are your cold weather care tips? ... ... Besides "get a garage" (not in the budget)
Thier should be A BLOCK HEATER all ready on your truck.. I have no issues starting my truck at -35 c, but the belt tensor whines, so I plug my truck in at -25c for a couple of hours.
I have to cover my rad with crad board to keep in the engine heat, even with a new thermostat, heater takes a while when I don't plug my truck in.
You can add a reculating heater thats betwean a heater hose into your heater core ( I forget if you add to the hose into the heater core, or the hose out of the heater core )
I all ways keep a full tank to 3/4 of a tank of flue, keep fluid changes up to date, turn off your heater controls, lights, radio, before starting.
Best soultion is a block heater, save wear and tear and dthe ignition system
I have to cover my rad with crad board to keep in the engine heat, even with a new thermostat, heater takes a while when I don't plug my truck in.
You can add a reculating heater thats betwean a heater hose into your heater core ( I forget if you add to the hose into the heater core, or the hose out of the heater core )
I all ways keep a full tank to 3/4 of a tank of flue, keep fluid changes up to date, turn off your heater controls, lights, radio, before starting.
Best soultion is a block heater, save wear and tear and dthe ignition system
LOL @ remote start, my wife's Yukon came with one from the factory, pretty cool. But I dont think its going to change the way your truck starts.
I took my truck to Nevada for work a couple of weeks ago instead of the work truck, and the temps were 30's during the day, and around 10 at night. I didnt start my truck for three days one time, and it started fine. Im running a 20w fully synthetic.
With consistant temps like that, it might be smart to get a block heater plugged in man.
I took my truck to Nevada for work a couple of weeks ago instead of the work truck, and the temps were 30's during the day, and around 10 at night. I didnt start my truck for three days one time, and it started fine. Im running a 20w fully synthetic.
With consistant temps like that, it might be smart to get a block heater plugged in man.
LOL @ remote start, my wife's Yukon came with one from the factory, pretty cool. But I dont think its going to change the way your truck starts.
I took my truck to Nevada for work a couple of weeks ago instead of the work truck, and the temps were 30's during the day, and around 10 at night. I didnt start my truck for three days one time, and it started fine. Im running a 20w fully synthetic.
With consistant temps like that, it might be smart to get a block heater plugged in man.
I took my truck to Nevada for work a couple of weeks ago instead of the work truck, and the temps were 30's during the day, and around 10 at night. I didnt start my truck for three days one time, and it started fine. Im running a 20w fully synthetic.
With consistant temps like that, it might be smart to get a block heater plugged in man.
Last edited by Dawizman; Dec 15, 2009 at 10:45 PM. Reason: Celsius to Fahrenheit Conversion
When do you think a block heater is necessary? The high temp for today was somewhere in the 3's... OK, maybe 10 or so... but it was COLD! Tonight they are calling for -25 windchills and a high of 7 for tomorrow. When I started my truck this morning ('06 1500 5.7) the power steering pump complained a lot, and there was a noticible extra tick coming from under the hood. I also noticed that the truck surged a little when I started it, barely noticible.
What are your cold weather care tips? ... ... Besides "get a garage" (not in the budget)
What are your cold weather care tips? ... ... Besides "get a garage" (not in the budget)
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When do you think a block heater is necessary? The high temp for today was somewhere in the 3's... OK, maybe 10 or so... but it was COLD! Tonight they are calling for -25 windchills and a high of 7 for tomorrow. When I started my truck this morning ('06 1500 5.7) the power steering pump complained a lot, and there was a noticible extra tick coming from under the hood. I also noticed that the truck surged a little when I started it, barely noticible.
What are your cold weather care tips? ... ... Besides "get a garage" (not in the budget)
What are your cold weather care tips? ... ... Besides "get a garage" (not in the budget)
the truck doesn't care what windchill is, only the ambient temperature matters.
heating up your coolant will get you heat faster, but won't do a thing to warm up your engine faster. coolant doesn't circulate till the engine is already at temperature and the thermostat opens.
these block heaters dont warm the coolant feej. its a dry port straight into the block. its actually a BLOCK heater (not a block heater that heats the oil or coolant).
to the OP, temps havent gotten above 0 (F) here in North Dakota for the last 2 weeks...not once. At some points, the temp has gotten to -20F (wind chills at -50, but again the truck cant tell wind chill). I always plug mine in if its gonna sit for more than 5-6 hours just for easier starting. you dont NEED a block heater though, even at these temps (i know people without them).
to the OP, temps havent gotten above 0 (F) here in North Dakota for the last 2 weeks...not once. At some points, the temp has gotten to -20F (wind chills at -50, but again the truck cant tell wind chill). I always plug mine in if its gonna sit for more than 5-6 hours just for easier starting. you dont NEED a block heater though, even at these temps (i know people without them).
these block heaters dont warm the coolant feej. its a dry port straight into the block. its actually a BLOCK heater (not a block heater that heats the oil or coolant).
to the OP, temps havent gotten above 0 (F) here in North Dakota for the last 2 weeks...not once. At some points, the temp has gotten to -20F (wind chills at -50, but again the truck cant tell wind chill). I always plug mine in if its gonna sit for more than 5-6 hours just for easier starting. you dont NEED a block heater though, even at these temps (i know people without them).
to the OP, temps havent gotten above 0 (F) here in North Dakota for the last 2 weeks...not once. At some points, the temp has gotten to -20F (wind chills at -50, but again the truck cant tell wind chill). I always plug mine in if its gonna sit for more than 5-6 hours just for easier starting. you dont NEED a block heater though, even at these temps (i know people without them).
The heaters for the hemi, I think, warm through a core plug in the block, goes straight to the block and oil.



