Do cars burn more gas after a cold start on a wintery morning?
May 20th, 2009 | by Michael |irobot10 asked:
After starting my drive at 5am, I see the smoke out of my car in the mirror of retrovisione. The smoke disappears after the engine has reached its normal operating temperature. Similarly one can see the smoke at the tail pipe of almost all cars that come from the various subdivisions in the morning. But nessun'automobile on the main road has a trace of smoke. So the question - the car burn more? gas after a cold start until the engine does not become hot enough?
MARCUS
After starting my drive at 5am, I see the smoke out of my car in the mirror of retrovisione. The smoke disappears after the engine has reached its normal operating temperature. Similarly one can see the smoke at the tail pipe of almost all cars that come from the various subdivisions in the morning. But nessun'automobile on the main road has a trace of smoke. So the question - the car burn more? gas after a cold start until the engine does not become hot enough?
MARCUS

6 Responses to “Do cars burn more gas after a cold start on a wintery morning?”
By Rango on May 22, 2009 | Reply
they burn a small amount of extra fuel, not much
what you are seeing is mostly water vapor (steam) until the engine is up to operating temp.
In the “old days” before computerized engine controls it was far worse, you could not be in a closed garage with a cold engine idling for more than a few minutes without your eyes watering.
Now with efficient engine control systems, modern engines do use a small amount more fuel for the first few minutes but it is far far better than it was.
By diesel tech on May 25, 2009 | Reply
what your seeing is condensation from a cold engine that’s heating up very quickly. Once all the components are warm it stops. But to answer you gas consumption question, it does burn more fuel when cold, doing this helps keep it from stalling until it’s warm
By Magley64...AM on May 27, 2009 | Reply
yes, they are much less efficient when they are cold…
By aristazibal on May 28, 2009 | Reply
Most cars will have a “high idle” when you first start them on a cold morning. There’s a sensor that checks the temp of the air being ****** into the engine. If that temp is too cold, it makes the engine run a little faster (just as if you had pressed down a bit on the gas pedal) until the engine compartment warms up. So, the difference that you’re probably seeing in the amount of “smoke” (exhaust) before and after your car warms up is simply due to a higher idle, and therefore more exhaust pressure - the hot air is moving faster out into the cold air, so it gets farther before it cools enough to “disappear”.
As for the “subdivision” versus “highway” difference, that’s probably more a matter of speed. For example - if you lit a cigarette (not that I’m encouraging anybody to smoke) and held it up to your window, you’d see more smoke if you were driving slow than if you were driving fast - same effect.
By Mike B on May 30, 2009 | Reply
The smoke is actually condensation from the combustion process of gasoline. Very normal. It diminishes greatly as the various components of the exhaust system come up to normal temps.
Yes, cars do use more gas in cold weather, especially after start-up, but drops to near normal when the engine is at normal operating temps.
By Olemisslover2012 on May 31, 2009 | Reply
Personally I would have to say yes they do.