This is the correct cold start procedure listed in most owners manuals. Pump pedal to flood engine, crank cold engine until starter motor starts to smoke. If engine actually starts, put foot to floor so your windows defrost as quickly as possible. Don't forget to never change the oil!
Good comment, I agree with you. This is not a negative comment. But............ The definition of regular describing things has changed over time. Regular oil to me was non detergent 30W. Regular gas was leaded gas that sold as low as 18.7 cents per gallon. I do use synthetic oil in my car now. Things change but the old stuff is still stuck in my mind.
@@mattikurimus Engine oils have 5 classes based on the base oil. I think the upper 2 levels are true syncthetic, the middle one is semi-synthtetic. So what is regular?
Heh, this made me laugh but when you’re in a shop like his people will pay you to take/dispose of these kinds of cars, usually they don’t pass inspection or are just too expensive to return to safe working order and must be scrapped, and you get to play with them =)
@@ce7545 just let it idle for 3-10 minutes depending on how cold it is, its not really necessary with modern engines though unless you're in below zero temps (Fahrenheit because I'm a filthy American). Just waiting until your revs drop is typically enough as long as you aren't flooring it out of the driveway
Below about -20c I always plugged in the block heater. It’s a small coolant heater that plugs into household wall plugs. Have started a truck gas engine with full synthetic oil at -35 without the block heater but it did not like it.
Yes, I do not speak russian so I use subs, but when watching russian movies with ammerican, french etc. charrecters male, female, Kids it is allways the same guy, it is bad, very bad.
I love the spirits of this seemingly russian (?) mechanics YT channel. No stupid product placement, no VPN BS, just passion and the will to share stuffs.
because you need way less money to survive YT money is way more then necessary anyway they are mechanics and have a real job.. compare that to american youtuber :D
They have another channel (the main one) where we have everything you mentioned. But I'm glad to see that you, my foreign friends, can watch the content without any ad trash
I love this, it reminds me from America that no matter the geographical differences or the differences our leaders try to make us believe. We are all the same. We have our hobbies and our curiosities all the same! Love From the United States!
Meanwhile, your social is being traded on the dark net by criminal groups sanctioned by the Russian government. People are similar, governments are very different when you have oligarchs running the show there.
Having grown up in Saskatchewan, where -40 C is not a rare occurrence, it is an eye opener to realize that most of the engine wear must occur during winter starts. Even using a block heater does not pre-heat the oil prior to start up. You would think that there would be a market for in oil pan heating coils rather than the stick on oil pan heaters that never stay stuck on.
Being from Alaska, I can state many times we just left our cars running while we ran into the store. I remember one year we were roughly -32F for 5-weeks and our poor car had to be towed to get started as the fuel was not atmozing. Took nearly two miles of towing before it got started. It was was an older Subaru with throttle body injection.
As a Canadian I can appreciate this based on our winters, -24 to -36 C is typical here also. Thank you for doing this video and also thank you for translating into English audio.
When I was doing engine development work 20+ years ago, we did cold starts at -40°. As soon as it fired, it was put on the governor. Sometimes it was only running on a couple of cylinders, and it might take a while for all of the cylinders to fire. I was working on a new lubrication system at one point, and the oil pressure spiked to 400psi and put the oil filter cannister onto the floor. Strings of oil were dangling from the filter head, and there was a PILE of oil on the floor.
@@loicdore39that’s false. Oil and gasoline are miscible. This is why fuel dilution is a thing, and modern cars will set mixture codes if the fuel dilutes the crankcase too much. Once oil and fuel mix, it’s very difficult for the two to separate. Some fuel will evaporate, but what will most definitely evaporate are the engine bearings if you run it with diluted oil for too long. This is why extended oil changes on direct injected engines is dumb.
@lynxstarautomotive208 in some airplane it's a mandatory protocol in very cold conditions so it must not so stupid . Long intervals are destructive indeed
ahhhh my fiat with the old 127 engine although monopoint injection and electronic ignition when its cold still starts first on 2 then 3 and in the end 4 cylinders lol
Dude. You’re a riot. I loved that attempt. I’m from northern Minnesota and we get temperatures down to -40 F. and I often thought about my oil as thick as honey. Engine heaters are a must here.
@@benson098123 a block heater is an electrode heater inserted into a soft plug opening on the engine block. Works like an electric water heater. Plugs into a household socket via an extension cord.
I was weeping for this poor old Lada wagon. Watching them cranking it with the engine oil as thick as molasses would give any mechanic heart palpitations.
When I was a young lad (many, many years ago), you used the thickest "mud" that would still allow the engine to start and yes, you warmed up until the temp gauge needle started to move. Doing anything else like a takeoff with thick, cold lube oil drastically shortened engine life. Modern engines are very different. These guys have done a great public service in demonstrating why you should always use the exact lubricating oils specified my the manufacture of your engine. These dudes get an A+ for being crazy fun!!!!
Not necessarily, using a slightly thicker weight oil than recommended on older engines (such as the ford crown victoria being recommended 5w20 when its best using 5w30)
Finally a video to prove that it is a good idea to warm your car up before driving I always read on the internet people saying that you do not need to warm your car up before driving it but I am the type of person that warms their car up for at least 20 minutes it's a lot more than just your motor oil people forget about the transmission fluid if you just start your car and pull away your transmission fluid is much thicker creating higher transmission pressures. You guys are awesome I love your channel keep doing what you do thank you for this video that clearly shows it's better to warm your car up
I just discovered Garage 54 and I am instantly hooked! The confidence you have in experimenting with engines and classic Russian vehicles, and your knowledge of how all of it works together--or doesn't work--is marvelous. I am looking forward to binge watching your channel from Virginia, USA.
I remember watching my grandfather build a small fire under the oil pan of his farm tractor, during cold weather in Wisconsin. I've used an electric heat tape and an old Army blanket to warm up the engine on my wood splitter in the winter. When it's 25 degrees (F) below zero outside, it would have to be an emergency if I had to start up my truck to go anywhere. I'm retired. Better to wait for the temperature to rise a bit. Same with a blizzard, better to hunker down and wait until it's over to venture anywhere. Good job showing what happens inside an engine during cold weather.
My grandpa used to freight with cats and sleighs and sometimes trucks in northern Manitoba and Saskatchewan back in the 1950s and 60s. My dad remembers going out in the bush with him to get a truck started. He used a fire to warm the engine as well, but he built it next to the truck and then shoveled the hot coals under the engine. I think he was worried about catching the truck on fire as the lower end was probably covered in oil from leaks. My dad said it took hours but when he finally turned it over it started just like it was summertime. Ken
@@hmw-ms3tx I used to live in Manitoba and we would sometimes go to my friends cabin during the winter in Lake of the Woods (Ontario). Usually around -38C and the cabin was on an Island so we would drive there on the ice roads so being stranded was really being stranded in -38 C weather as cell phones weren't a thing back then. We would take our batteries out of our SUV's and take them inside the cabin (fireplace for heat) for the night to keep them fresh. In the morning I would light a bag of match light charcoal (used for grilling) and place it on a cookie sheet. I would wait a bit for any flames to die down and the heat to subside a bit as to not melt anything under the SUV and then slide the pan under the SUV's oil pan. 20 minutes or so was usually good, bring the battery out and reconnect it while we waited (easier said then done in -38C) and the SUV's started up like summer time (like you said). It was a good system but the inside of the SUV would smell like smoke from the charcoal for a few months. If I ever had to do it again I would park the night before with the wind direction in mind.
Use to be the same on our old farm. We didn't build fires but would use kerosene heaters with blankets over the tractor engine. This was with the engine block heater running. Cars would usually start with the block heater running alone, but they wouldn't like it and need to be warmed up.
Great video. Living in Alaska we have similar issues. This is why we install block heaters, oil pan heaters and battery tenders for safer starting. Sometimes we use diesel forced air heaters with a tarp over the engine to get things going.
@@PotatotheTroll meh that's a warm summer I have been through minus 52 Celsius which is much colder kiddo that will freeze your balls off in a second flat🤣
This voice from BMI Russian almost choked me from laughing so hard!! Garage 54 guests learn after a video is published to RUclips how their translated voice is going to sound. :)
I used to drive a Volvo 145 wagon (a 1969) with dual carbs. It didnt have a choke, but the knob on the dash opened a valve in one carb to trickle raw gas into the intake manifold. Yes it worked, even at -45F. When the engine started, it made terrifying noises for the first two minutes, but ran. This was in Northern Minnesota. You only get about two seconds of cranking, even with a new battery (when its -45F). Its a good idea to cover half the radiator when its that cold. Most Antifreeze is only rated good to about -50F so we did worry about that too. At those temps, tubeless tires will sometimes just go flat, gasoline is like oil, oil is solid, and differential grease is like concrete.
Excellent video. Having worked on numerous Ford Pinto engines with the hexagon drive from distributor to oil pump, which was a renown weak point. The later CVH engine had the oil pump driven directly from two flats on the front crankshaft journal. I have never experienced anywhere near minus 20 degrees C, but can now easily see how it affects oil flow (or lack of it). Once again, excellent video
@Garage54 Excellent demonstration. I'd love to see this same car tested with completely synthetic oil to see if the lower viscosity really makes a difference in an extreme environment like this.
@@Topsiekku You know the first number in oil is when the oil is hot right, the second number, or high number is when the oil is cold. Think i'm wrong, toss some 0w40 in the freezer and see how it pours. The first number is the viscosity at 300f. The second number is viscosity at the freezing point, 0c or 32f. Hope that helps.
@@JuanSe2691 Look at any oil test with temps and viscosity. If the first number is the cold number, or thin viscostiy then why is it so thick? Ever change oil on a cold engine vs a hot off the highway engine? The first number is the hot, or running viscosity. Stick some oil in the freezer and come back and tell me the oil is nice and thin, low viscosity first number and pours out fast and easy. And tell me what oil gets thicker as it gets hotter? Did you even watch the video? Was that runny thin oil in the cold? Send some links to oil viscosity tests at cold and hot temps proving cold oil flows faster and better. I will wait.
@@ducewags well, any decent multi-grade oil should be nice and thin when cold, and offer good film strength under operating temperatures. That's the whole meaning of the numbers. I use 5w40 oil in my car as recommended by the manufacturer, the 5w means it's going to have enough fluidity when cold to offer immediate flow to crucial parts within the engine, and the 40 represents the viscosity at operating (hot) temperatures. Oh but the oil is thick when cold and thin when hot you say? That's a monograde oil and shouldn't be used on anything other than vintage cars that call for it and stationary machinery. Those have a single number. That's exactly what a multi-grade oil solves by behaving in an opposite way. Say, a monograde 40 oil is going to be thick from the get go, especially when cold. Now, a 5w40, is going to be thinner the colder it gets (until a certain point, that is), but at operating temperatures is going to behave like the 40 weight when hot. That's all there is to it. It's not rocket science. Even if I'm qualified to tell you about these things (I'm a certified automotive technician) that shouldn't be the case, any person of average knowledge and especially a car owner should know. It's even on almost every car's owners manual, with graphics and everything.
I am impressed, I new something could happen, but I just thought it would fire up, in the UK it hardly freezes below -6 , one year it was -15 for a night and froze hard for some time after, the soil pipes froze, luckily it warmed up again, so no unpleasant jobs, full respect to you in Russia, that is properly cold and I now know if arctic conditions come to the UK, I need to heat my car first.
They drained the oil then changed the pan and filled fresh oil in. After they chilled the car but the oil pump was still empty and could not get the air out with the cold, thick oil. They should have fired up the engine for a minute to get the air out of the system after the oil change before they chilled it over night.
What an exciting display of ingenuity. In winter your oil becomes too thick to be picked up and distributed throughout the engine. The amount of force to pickup the oil required increases, resulting in an increase in the torque on the distributor shaft gear. This torque was strong enough to break it's teeth. You totally illustrated this in a meaningful and easy to understand concept. Thank You.
No, not to pick it up. That would only be ~14psi worth of work. Pressure. It can't leave thru the frozen channels it normally passes thru, and can't bleed off thru the relief for the same reason. The pressure builds up and since liquids are incompressible, something has to give. If the oil can't escape anywhere, the torque coming into the pump has to.
Thank you very much for that experiment!! It made me think of the -15.0 F morning in McCall,ID when I cold-started my 86 Chevy Sprint and destroyed the oil pump. I actually ran the car for a full year without a functioning oil pump. The engine was noisy at first andleaked about 1qt of motor per week oil, but I just kept adding a blend of motor oil and STP
Ladas were generally fairly reliable, despite being unsophisticated. But that made them easy to fix and it's why they became so popular in Russia's harsh conditions.
In the winter with my 1987 International 6.9L diesel-- I would get under my truck and take a torch to the oil pan and filter for 20 minutes. Always did the trick. There was no way in the coldest weather I would force that beast to start without heating the oil. Once you get her all warmed up- she ran like a champ.
Awesome, you did your experiment exactly right. I love it haha. It was going threw my head how you needed to do this and I was pleased to see you did it as I envisioned. Love Garage 54 from Phoenix Arizona USA!
Hello from the USA. I really like your video. I always wondered what the oil behaved like on a cold start as I live in a part of the U.S. that can get very cold in the winter too. Thanks again!
Cool demonstration. It shows one of the many reasons that ice road truckers operating up near the Arctic circle have to put a covering on the bottom of the engine and transmission. In conditions that cold, they have had problems oil and transmission fluid gumming up even when the truck has been running for a long time. The tarp covering they put on helps to trap heat.
It was definitely some pretty darn viscous oil. This unfortunately tells us nothing since none of our cars that we actually use and drive have oil dispersement systems like that old soviet Lada.
@@dosmundos3830 I think that's a mistranslation, I have a feeling they meant dino and/or straight weight oil. Mineral oil is what non synthetic oil was called.
My dad and I ran his Mack truck all night outside at minus 35C one night as we changed engines in another vehical. He didn't want to shut it off as he was afraid it would not start again outside the shop at minus 35 and we were in the start of a 3 week cold snap. The 1957 Mack B-61 with the 170, cracked a piston that night. We ran that old grain truck for 5 years with a cracked piston. At the end of its life he would drain 3 gallons of water from the oil pan in the morning. We were running 80-90 gear oil for engine oil. It would steam out 5 gallons of water in a 6 mile run to the field, and for the first start in the morning it would take a can and a half of ether to start it. My dad said, "I buy Mack trucks, because if you can start it, it will get you home."
Try this again on a engine that isn't worn-out 110%, and try not too hold it to the floor on startup, lol, the effort you guys put into your projects is second to none, you are all awesome, great video, and thanks for sharing.
Wouldn't make a different on this car. The lubrication of this engine is GARBAGE. It's a good thing though that it's all cast iron and you can rev the fuck out of it even like this. I would like to see the same test on a modern engine. Modern lubrication systems are much better at circulating cold thick oil.
I always have great sympathy towards the Russians who make their videos translated and available for us, who don't understand sh!t in Russian. Спасибо тебе друг !
Im an aviation nut.... The Russian's when they flew their old radials in these same conditions, would add petrol to the oil to thin it out. Then as the engine warmed the oil would get to temperatures and all the petrol in the oil would burn off. Its actually in the manual.
Oil dilution was used before shutdown. There is a shutdown chart that specifies the amount of time the dilution switch is activated for the expected start air temperature
Definitely cool as I've never seen anything like this before. This why engine block heaters are used at this temperature. Nice job! I'd like to see this on the transmission.
That was interesting, thank you. :) And hello from Alberta Canada....looking for -42C shortly after Christmas here, thank goodness for block heaters. :) Merry Christmas and stay warm.
@@manuelsilva1999 Yeah, I have done my time too. Makes me want to get a green card and move to some place like Texas or Arizona. If some one offered me a job in Flagstaff I would be there in a flash!
i was broke down once in MN at -22f waiting for a tow truck. belt broke so no water pump and no heat. ive experienced -45f as well in MT. its freaky how that kind of cold feels. all you can do is dress in layers.
@@_AndromedaGalaxy_ I live in western Canada. If I'm traveling in the winter through cold weather I have a survival kit that includes a parka good for -45C, thermal pants, candles and some high calorie food like trail mix. If I have passengers I insist that they equip themselves for an emergency. Before I went to university I was a surveyor so I know about being out in cold weather. On the survey crew I was standing at the instrument in -40C with a 30k north wind for 2 hours - we spent the rest of the day in the truck. The problem with weather like that is all you have to is look at something wrong and it breaks!!!
My first car, when aged 17, was a 1977 Vauxhall Chevette and it suffered the exact same failure of the gear between the camsaft and oil pump / distributor. Fixed it and I've been fixing cars ever since.
I love it how you guys are like " nah , it got warmer since this morning". -24 deg. celsius and Vlad doesn't even have his winter jacket zipped up all the way lmfao. You guys are epic, cheers from RO
I’m a school bus driver, and in the winter time sometimes we put these little electric blanket things under the oil pan to warm up the oil for this reason. Also, all buses are plugged into trickle chargers whenever they bit being being driven, especially overnight. Both of those things help a ton!
Wow!! What an awesome channel! This is a lot like Kerosan English which is a lot like this. This poor Lada was the hero here but really the start and the battery are the true tough guys lol. Love from Canada 🇨🇦 ❤
Considering they are using mineral oil it's likely just breaking up any and all carbon buildup since they didn't even bother flushing the engine, so a bit of old oil too.
@@SilvaDreams He said it would be flushed, or at least go through an extra oil change prior, no other reason they'd be unwrapping multiple oil filters.
Froze the lada and when it doesn’t stay running ask what’s wrong with you. Hahahaha love the ladas wish we had them in the states. Y’all make amazing video very entertaining and well worth a watch.
But that is the best way actually. If the oil pump can pump oil in idle, it can also pump oil under load. And even better with higher revs. Just don't floor it like a mad man. Idling doesn't really take much and the oil takes longer to get to temperature. And in some countries it is forbidden to let your car idle just to get it to temperature.
@@vasiliansotirov6976 I had a TU 1.1L engine once that had low compression and dropped liners, I bounced it off the limiter for about 5 seconds and managed to spin 3 of the 4 bearings in that time
Maybe you can do the same thing with different grade of oils. 5w-30, 10w-40 etc in -30c environment? See how fast they can start lubricate top of the engine.
Yeah! We are really interested in your more and more transparent stuff, please do keep making these videos and we your fans are here to support you till death. One of best channel on the planet 👌 👏.
Battery 🔋 and starter are winners here! Here jn Montreal it hits minus 30-40 degrees as well and my Toyota Corolla 09 always starts! Would love to see a recent Corolla or Civic see a transparent valve and oil pan cover test with synthetic oil!
The true unsung champion here is the battery
A round of applause for the battery ladies and gents
You beat me to it. I was asking myself what kind of battery they are using. The guy just turn the key and went to sleep.
Don’t forget that starter that poor thing ran the motor till it warmed up enough to start! It and the battery are the true heroes here!
you both forgot about the starter wires, these probably has reach the temperature of sun
Maybe they should of made it electric
They may as well had just started shifting gears.
This is the correct cold start procedure listed in most owners manuals. Pump pedal to flood engine, crank cold engine until starter motor starts to smoke. If engine actually starts, put foot to floor so your windows defrost as quickly as possible. Don't forget to never change the oil!
yeah that's totally legit🤣🤣🤣
@@CawKee I know I did that with a bmw i3s already🤣
😂😂😂
LMAO!!!😂
Literally every cold start in the world looks like that. It's rather frozen wrack trying to start
It would have been nice to see synthetic oil versus regular motor oil instead of mineral oil
What is "regular motor oil"? Regularly they are synthetic... And other option is mineral.
Good comment, I agree with you. This is not a negative comment. But............ The definition of regular describing things has changed over time. Regular oil to me was non detergent 30W. Regular gas was leaded gas that sold as low as 18.7 cents per gallon. I do use synthetic oil in my car now. Things change but the old stuff is still stuck in my mind.
Synthetic oil is probably not readily available in the Country this was filmed in.
With synthetic 5W-40 it'll just be liquid at -30C. The temperature it freezes at is -40 F (which is also -40C)
@@mattikurimus Engine oils have 5 classes based on the base oil. I think the upper 2 levels are true syncthetic, the middle one is semi-synthtetic. So what is regular?
Can we just appreciate the fact that he never clickbait us?
Plus they dub the audio for English users which Im grateful for
And he doesnt try to sell us a vpn
Not even the thumbnail.
🙌😍
Straight up no fuss engineering i love it! ❤
"This thing is completely frozen over"
*Red-lines it*
That oil is so thick at that temp you actually could burn the motor up by redding it like that. Need to let the oil work through
It’s called an express warm up
Heh, this made me laugh but when you’re in a shop like his people will pay you to take/dispose of these kinds of cars, usually they don’t pass inspection or are just too expensive to return to safe working order and must be scrapped, and you get to play with them =)
Exactly what I used to do in my old Civic. It never failed me.
@@badhorse1640 Italian fixxing
As a Canadian, this really shows why it’s important to warm up the car before you start driving
How do you warm it up before starting. Im in Australia so never had to think about frozen oil
@@ce7545 just let it idle for 3-10 minutes depending on how cold it is, its not really necessary with modern engines though unless you're in below zero temps (Fahrenheit because I'm a filthy American). Just waiting until your revs drop is typically enough as long as you aren't flooring it out of the driveway
@@ce7545 A block heater most cars in Canada have them from factory, Also use a 0w weight oil in those temps.
Below about -20c I always plugged in the block heater. It’s a small coolant heater that plugs into household wall plugs.
Have started a truck gas engine with full synthetic oil at -35 without the block heater but it did not like it.
Thanks for listening to us Vlad. Speaks highly of your character.
His names vlad? Hm
@@kylethompson2431 yeah. He's pretty interesting if you Google him.
Sounds so much more natural with Vlad. Glad he's back. Wise decision
Your the best
Yes he reads all our comments
Can we all just appreciate the battery and the starter during the cold-start? I salute you.
The battery is the real mvp
And how the starter solenoid didn't melt with that much constant cranking. Honestly I was shocked.
That must have been a Grade A++++ battery to keep cranking like that.
Indeed. A proper Salute to them 2 fellows
Always thumb down any comment that starts with "Can we"
I love the art of the voiceover, how he's obligated to make distinctly different voices for different people. It's hilarious
Yes, I do not speak russian so I use subs, but when watching russian movies with ammerican, french etc. charrecters male, female, Kids it is allways the same guy, it is bad, very bad.
@@dimitarmladenski1367 No way! That's even funnier
Default male voice 1, default female voice 1, default child voice 1.
I came directly to the comments looking to see if someone already said this!
I love that the lab tech type guy had a nerdy voice 😂
I love the spirits of this seemingly russian (?) mechanics YT channel. No stupid product placement, no VPN BS, just passion and the will to share stuffs.
The « meanwhile in Russia » meme is perfect here ^^ I love this channel.
i know what s wrong with it, it aint got no gas in it
because you need way less money to survive YT money is way more then necessary anyway they are mechanics and have a real job.. compare that to american youtuber :D
These videos are so oldschool, I like it ☺️
They have another channel (the main one) where we have everything you mentioned. But I'm glad to see that you, my foreign friends, can watch the content without any ad trash
Great work from Garage 54 Russia. Ingenious plastic valve and sump cover. Thanks for going to all this trouble. Tom from New Zealand.
Car: doesn’t start
Vlad: “You call yourself a Lada?!?”
Car: “How dare you sir.” *VROOM*
You got it all wrong lol. Not starting is a natural state for a Lada.
Needs more vodka to wake up
After he said the car just started🤣
Lada got embrassed and started
*_LOL I love this comment and replies_* 😂
@@demoliter yeah ha ha after it starts is when you should be saying “you call yourself a Lada?“
I love this, it reminds me from America that no matter the geographical differences or the differences our leaders try to make us believe. We are all the same. We have our hobbies and our curiosities all the same! Love From the United States!
Yup, true, very true.
And that should be pinned to top of the comment section collin 🖐
Greetings from Poland.
👍
Meanwhile, your social is being traded on the dark net by criminal groups sanctioned by the Russian government. People are similar, governments are very different when you have oligarchs running the show there.
@@dylconnaway9976 You mean Zionist oligarchs?
Having grown up in Saskatchewan, where -40 C is not a rare occurrence, it is an eye opener to realize that most of the engine wear must occur during winter starts. Even using a block heater does not pre-heat the oil prior to start up. You would think that there would be a market for in oil pan heating coils rather than the stick on oil pan heaters that never stay stuck on.
fun fact: -40 C and -40 F are the same temperature
@@Novous They're almost certainly using Celsius given where they're located.
@@Novous Lol you looked it up didn't you?
@@matthewmorgan582 probably not. I thought most people knew that since middle school.
Being from Alaska, I can state many times we just left our cars running while we ran into the store. I remember one year we were roughly -32F for 5-weeks and our poor car had to be towed to get started as the fuel was not atmozing. Took nearly two miles of towing before it got started. It was was an older Subaru with throttle body injection.
As a Canadian I can appreciate this based on our winters, -24 to -36 C is typical here also. Thank you for doing this video and also thank you for translating into English audio.
im from ontario idk how yall can live where it gets -30 and just be ok with it but i solute you
Even though this was very interesting, this is the WORST way to warm up a car. Winnipegger here, started cars in -40 in rare cases.
I winters ago mfs made me work outside at -35 Celsius
@@newchoppak It's - 30 in Ontario right now ;)
Everyone should remember this is cheap mineral oil, good full synthetic should act aaloott better. Still worth warming up when its that cold though
The translator is probably a cool guy but he's cracking me up because he translates with the same cadence as Kermit the Frog.
Read, now cannot not hear Kermit
I ain't complaining, honestly.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Yeah thanks for that, all I picture is a damn frog now lol
It's Constantine!
When I was doing engine development work 20+ years ago, we did cold starts at -40°. As soon as it fired, it was put on the governor. Sometimes it was only running on a couple of cylinders, and it might take a while for all of the cylinders to fire. I was working on a new lubrication system at one point, and the oil pressure spiked to 400psi and put the oil filter cannister onto the floor. Strings of oil were dangling from the filter head, and there was a PILE of oil on the floor.
A simple fix is to mix fuel into the oil and job done . The fuel will evaporate when the engine heats up
@@loicdore39that’s false. Oil and gasoline are miscible. This is why fuel dilution is a thing, and modern cars will set mixture codes if the fuel dilutes the crankcase too much.
Once oil and fuel mix, it’s very difficult for the two to separate. Some fuel will evaporate, but what will most definitely evaporate are the engine bearings if you run it with diluted oil for too long.
This is why extended oil changes on direct injected engines is dumb.
@lynxstarautomotive208 in some airplane it's a mandatory protocol in very cold conditions so it must not so stupid .
Long intervals are destructive indeed
ahhhh my fiat with the old 127 engine although monopoint injection and electronic ignition when its cold still starts first on 2 then 3 and in the end 4 cylinders lol
You were using the wrong viscosity oil!!
Dude. You’re a riot. I loved that attempt. I’m from northern Minnesota and we get temperatures down to -40 F. and I often thought about my oil as thick as honey. Engine heaters are a must here.
My Infiniti with 0w40 does great up here, -40 and it didn't care, warmed up in 10 minutes . My Duramax will start, but it doesn't warm up at all
Block heater ?
@@benson098123 a block heater is an electrode heater inserted into a soft plug opening on the engine block. Works like an electric water heater. Plugs into a household socket via an extension cord.
I was weeping for this poor old Lada wagon. Watching them cranking it with the engine oil as thick as molasses would give any mechanic heart palpitations.
When I was a young lad (many, many years ago), you used the thickest "mud" that would still allow the engine to start and yes, you warmed up until the temp gauge needle started to move. Doing anything else like a takeoff with thick, cold lube oil drastically shortened engine life. Modern engines are very different. These guys have done a great public service in demonstrating why you should always use the exact lubricating oils specified my the manufacture of your engine. These dudes get an A+ for being crazy fun!!!!
Not necessarily, using a slightly thicker weight oil than recommended on older engines (such as the ford crown victoria being recommended 5w20 when its best using 5w30)
@@TheCatOfAges i own a 2004 crown victoria and I use 5w - 30 also
The young man is extremely skilled with both the cutoff grinder and the sealant. Very impressive
Request: Transparent (see through) coolant pipe please
You can buy those online already. Was a car show trend a few years back
Damn dog i heard you like doughnut s
With RGB lighting!
Yessss
Lmao pc watercooling bro
no one:
The Starter: I'm fighting for my life
No one: Wouldn't it be wonderful if kids on the net started putting a superfluous "no one:" in every god damn comment they make?
Finally a video to prove that it is a good idea to warm your car up before driving I always read on the internet people saying that you do not need to warm your car up before driving it but I am the type of person that warms their car up for at least 20 minutes it's a lot more than just your motor oil people forget about the transmission fluid if you just start your car and pull away your transmission fluid is much thicker creating higher transmission pressures. You guys are awesome I love your channel keep doing what you do thank you for this video that clearly shows it's better to warm your car up
Can you do this test again but this time use synthetic oil?
I would expect much better results.
Or any modern proper engine oil
Doesnt matter Synthetic or conventional, 5w-20 will perform the same bc its made for those temps.
@@LucasIsBusy project farm tested that and synthetic flowed better than conventional oil at sub zero Temps. So ya youre mistaken
@@JM-yx1lm Many others have tested this as well. Synthetic has much better cold flow.
Pretty much any 0W oil should theoretically work.
I love how the translator makes everyone’s voice higher than vlad’s 😂😂
@9.38 mark "khuchu khuchu khuchu" 🤣🤣🤣🤣
So here's the situation
idk how there isn’t more subscribers to this channel, its always been a gold mine.
I just discovered Garage 54 and I am instantly hooked! The confidence you have in experimenting with engines and classic Russian vehicles, and your knowledge of how all of it works together--or doesn't work--is marvelous. I am looking forward to binge watching your channel from Virginia, USA.
she thinks she can she thinks she can the oil looks like the engines crying from trying to hard to start🤣🤣🤣
Virginia here as well and I am in total agreeance
I laughed my ass off when he said “you are a lada aren’t you? Start!” 🤣
bcs -20С in pretty common temperature for winter in your location. And lots of this cars useв before and now in such environment
The most russian thing ever
I love the clear valve Cover, and oil pan. Well done 👍
I remember watching my grandfather build a small fire under the oil pan of his farm tractor, during cold weather in Wisconsin. I've used an electric heat tape and an old Army blanket to warm up the engine on my wood splitter in the winter. When it's 25 degrees (F) below zero outside, it would have to be an emergency if I had to start up my truck to go anywhere. I'm retired. Better to wait for the temperature to rise a bit. Same with a blizzard, better to hunker down and wait until it's over to venture anywhere. Good job showing what happens inside an engine during cold weather.
My grandpa used to freight with cats and sleighs and sometimes trucks in northern Manitoba and Saskatchewan back in the 1950s and 60s. My dad remembers going out in the bush with him to get a truck started. He used a fire to warm the engine as well, but he built it next to the truck and then shoveled the hot coals under the engine. I think he was worried about catching the truck on fire as the lower end was probably covered in oil from leaks. My dad said it took hours but when he finally turned it over it started just like it was summertime. Ken
@@hmw-ms3tx I used to live in Manitoba and we would sometimes go to my friends cabin during the winter in Lake of the Woods (Ontario). Usually around -38C and the cabin was on an Island so we would drive there on the ice roads so being stranded was really being stranded in -38 C weather as cell phones weren't a thing back then. We would take our batteries out of our SUV's and take them inside the cabin (fireplace for heat) for the night to keep them fresh. In the morning I would light a bag of match light charcoal (used for grilling) and place it on a cookie sheet. I would wait a bit for any flames to die down and the heat to subside a bit as to not melt anything under the SUV and then slide the pan under the SUV's oil pan. 20 minutes or so was usually good, bring the battery out and reconnect it while we waited (easier said then done in -38C) and the SUV's started up like summer time (like you said). It was a good system but the inside of the SUV would smell like smoke from the charcoal for a few months. If I ever had to do it again I would park the night before with the wind direction in mind.
here in finland car starts easily in -4 fahrenheit
Use to be the same on our old farm. We didn't build fires but would use kerosene heaters with blankets over the tractor engine. This was with the engine block heater running. Cars would usually start with the block heater running alone, but they wouldn't like it and need to be warmed up.
Would love to see the same thing with fully synthetic oil as a comparison
Yeah totally...as the oil quality must make a huge difference i quess
Exactly, fully synthtic 0w30 would be absolutely fine with this temperature
@@piotrmaecki5268 And it would be fantastic to see it actually tested if the difference is as huge as we all are thinking
Or any multigrade oil.
@@piotrmaecki5268 im sure it will be a little bit thicker than usual especially at -30C, but still okay.
Great video. Living in Alaska we have similar issues. This is why we install block heaters, oil pan heaters and battery tenders for safer starting. Sometimes we use diesel forced air heaters with a tarp over the engine to get things going.
minus 24 is nothing minus 40 is way way colder and more hard core then minus 24 Russians have it easy in winter
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ueminus 40? That’s it huh?
@@SaraMorgan-ym6uethat's -24 Celsius, ya know
@@PotatotheTroll meh that's a warm summer I have been through minus 52 Celsius which is much colder kiddo that will freeze your balls off in a second flat🤣
Or if you’re whistlin diesel, you just light a fire directly under the engine block
I want to see this experiment with different weight oils. Just to see how well each oil does.
Project Farm has a few videos with that sort of idea.
mixing oils? Nice
same here
@@iainmacrae6982 just not in a running car though
Best visual display ever for using pure synthetic motor oil. With 0W-20 or 5W-20 this start would have been no problem.
The translator broke out the nerd voice for this 02:34
Hahah he does it more in the older videos or any video with Russian speaking guests really
I literally lol'd out loud.
"nerd voice" lmao
This voice from BMI Russian almost choked me from laughing so hard!!
Garage 54 guests learn after a video is published to RUclips how their translated voice is going to sound. :)
that part was hilarious lol
I used to drive a Volvo 145 wagon (a 1969) with dual carbs. It didnt have a choke, but the knob on the dash opened a valve in one carb to trickle raw gas into the intake manifold. Yes it worked, even at -45F. When the engine started, it made terrifying noises for the first two minutes, but ran. This was in Northern Minnesota. You only get about two seconds of cranking, even with a new battery (when its -45F). Its a good idea to cover half the radiator when its that cold. Most Antifreeze is only rated good to about -50F so we did worry about that too. At those temps, tubeless tires will sometimes just go flat, gasoline is like oil, oil is solid, and differential grease is like concrete.
I love that he takes the time to have someone translate it for him.
I think it'd be cool to see you guys do this test back to back, with conventional oil and synthetic oil so we can see the difference.
in a recent car as well I'm sure it'S a little different
Excellent video. Having worked on numerous Ford Pinto engines with the hexagon drive from distributor to oil pump, which was a renown weak point. The later CVH engine had the oil pump driven directly from two flats on the front crankshaft journal.
I have never experienced anywhere near minus 20 degrees C, but can now easily see how it affects oil flow (or lack of it).
Once again, excellent video
“You are a lada aren’t you? Start!”
Words of encouragement
"It's actually not that cold"
Termometer: -24C
bruh
that isn't very cold my guy
It’s cold in Fahrenheit. Apparently not in Celsius.
@@tomc8829 that's only -11 F.
@@tomc8829 it's cold in Celsius too, just not in Russia 🤭
@Garage54 Excellent demonstration. I'd love to see this same car tested with completely synthetic oil to see if the lower viscosity really makes a difference in an extreme environment like this.
Yes, more clear covers! Really interesting!
That was excellent, I would like to see the exact same test with a modern engine that only run on synthetic oil like 0W20 for example.
0W20 Is a Great Oil! What grade is used in this test?
@@stevethompson152 I'm going with honey on that one.
@@stevethompson152i guess something like 10w40 mineral oil
0w20, used in hybrids like Toyotas too
I like this format of being able to hear the speaker with the english translator on top
me too
Hats off to giving different voices to the characters, BRAVO !
Yes more transparent oil videos!
Try the same with syntetich motor oil.
Yes 0w40 or 0w30
@@Topsiekku You know the first number in oil is when the oil is hot right, the second number, or high number is when the oil is cold. Think i'm wrong, toss some 0w40 in the freezer and see how it pours. The first number is the viscosity at 300f. The second number is viscosity at the freezing point, 0c or 32f. Hope that helps.
@@ducewags you got it backwards. First (lower) W number is viscosity in cold temperatures and the higher number is viscosity at 100°c IIRC.
@@JuanSe2691 Look at any oil test with temps and viscosity. If the first number is the cold number, or thin viscostiy then why is it so thick? Ever change oil on a cold engine vs a hot off the highway engine? The first number is the hot, or running viscosity. Stick some oil in the freezer and come back and tell me the oil is nice and thin, low viscosity first number and pours out fast and easy. And tell me what oil gets thicker as it gets hotter? Did you even watch the video? Was that runny thin oil in the cold? Send some links to oil viscosity tests at cold and hot temps proving cold oil flows faster and better. I will wait.
@@ducewags well, any decent multi-grade oil should be nice and thin when cold, and offer good film strength under operating temperatures. That's the whole meaning of the numbers. I use 5w40 oil in my car as recommended by the manufacturer, the 5w means it's going to have enough fluidity when cold to offer immediate flow to crucial parts within the engine, and the 40 represents the viscosity at operating (hot) temperatures.
Oh but the oil is thick when cold and thin when hot you say? That's a monograde oil and shouldn't be used on anything other than vintage cars that call for it and stationary machinery. Those have a single number. That's exactly what a multi-grade oil solves by behaving in an opposite way. Say, a monograde 40 oil is going to be thick from the get go, especially when cold. Now, a 5w40, is going to be thinner the colder it gets (until a certain point, that is), but at operating temperatures is going to behave like the 40 weight when hot.
That's all there is to it. It's not rocket science. Even if I'm qualified to tell you about these things (I'm a certified automotive technician) that shouldn't be the case, any person of average knowledge and especially a car owner should know. It's even on almost every car's owners manual, with graphics and everything.
No way!!! Just the other day I was thinking I wonder what super cold oil would look like in a engine on cold start up. I really love this channel.
I am impressed, I new something could happen, but I just thought it would fire up, in the UK it hardly freezes below -6 , one year it was -15 for a night and froze hard for some time after, the soil pipes froze, luckily it warmed up again, so no unpleasant jobs, full respect to you in Russia, that is properly cold and I now know if arctic conditions come to the UK, I need to heat my car first.
They drained the oil then changed the pan and filled fresh oil in. After they chilled the car but the oil pump was still empty and could not get the air out with the cold, thick oil. They should have fired up the engine for a minute to get the air out of the system after the oil change before they chilled it over night.
What an exciting display of ingenuity. In winter your oil becomes too thick to be picked up and distributed throughout the engine. The amount of force to pickup the oil required increases, resulting in an increase in the torque on the distributor shaft gear. This torque was strong enough to break it's teeth. You totally illustrated this in a meaningful and easy to understand concept. Thank You.
No, not to pick it up. That would only be ~14psi worth of work.
Pressure. It can't leave thru the frozen channels it normally passes thru, and can't bleed off thru the relief for the same reason.
The pressure builds up and since liquids are incompressible, something has to give. If the oil can't escape anywhere, the torque coming into the pump has to.
This guy is restoring T72s that have been sitting outside for decades and being a baller
Thank you very much for that experiment!! It made me think of the -15.0 F morning in McCall,ID when I cold-started my 86 Chevy Sprint and destroyed the oil pump. I actually ran the car for a full year without a functioning oil pump. The engine was noisy at first andleaked about 1qt of motor per week oil, but I just kept adding a blend of motor oil and STP
The one dislike is from a person who's mad his oil tank isn't clear.
Its two now
No it's from the guy who lost the splines to his distributor shaft this morning, right before they uploaded this video.
the dislikes are from the people who actually wanted to see how engine oil performed in -30 c. Mineral oil = click bait lol
45 angry dislikes ones by now 🤣
But I'm mad my oil tank isn't clear. I'm mad my whole engine isn't clear!
World's funniest car mechanic. This guy has a unique imagination, sometimes I have to see the fun stuff a couple of times
"You call yourself a Lada?" Oh My God, that is funny, Vlad. :)
Ladas were generally fairly reliable, despite being unsophisticated. But that made them easy to fix and it's why they became so popular in Russia's harsh conditions.
Plot twist : They are actually using customers cars for all these experiments !
🤣🤣👍🏻
"Testing"
Why the hell would anyone do these things to there own. They even show the customers the broken parts and charge them for the repairs
Lol I thought the same thing!
old news :)
In the winter with my 1987 International 6.9L diesel-- I would get under my truck and take a torch to the oil pan and filter for 20 minutes. Always did the trick. There was no way in the coldest weather I would force that beast to start without heating the oil. Once you get her all warmed up- she ran like a champ.
Hell of a starter on that there engine.
Back when all startats was ungeared... could run Forever... its worse for the batery
Nice battery too!
I read that in the translators voice
I thought the starter was gonna take a crap! The motor is crying, give me VODKA! Hell of a battery too!
Awesome, you did your experiment exactly right. I love it haha. It was going threw my head how you needed to do this and I was pleased to see you did it as I envisioned. Love Garage 54 from Phoenix Arizona USA!
Hello from the USA. I really like your video. I always wondered what the oil behaved like on a cold start as I live in a part of the U.S. that can get very cold in the winter too. Thanks again!
Cool demonstration. It shows one of the many reasons that ice road truckers operating up near the Arctic circle have to put a covering on the bottom of the engine and transmission. In conditions that cold, they have had problems oil and transmission fluid gumming up even when the truck has been running for a long time. The tarp covering they put on helps to trap heat.
What weight oil were they running? It would be interesting to see how a 5W or 0W would perform in those temperatures
I think straight 30 or 40 weight oil
It was definitely some pretty darn viscous oil. This unfortunately tells us nothing since none of our cars that we actually use and drive have oil dispersement systems like that old soviet Lada.
Probably 10-40 if it was regular mineral oil.
mineral oil has a viscosity in the 100's at 0c, at -30 it would be in the thousands.
@@dosmundos3830 I think that's a mistranslation, I have a feeling they meant dino and/or straight weight oil.
Mineral oil is what non synthetic oil was called.
Make more transparent things like the transmission, coolant tubes etc. would be very cool to see!
Transparent tranny pan wouldn't really show much since there isn't any moving parts.
@@tylerbonser7686 transparent all the things lol
@@uwusempai2309 naked car 😳
@@posadist681 indeed
Most edifying. It must be a Russian trait to tackle a problem head-on and find out for one's self. Strong work, guys.
My dad and I ran his Mack truck all night outside at minus 35C one night as we changed engines in another vehical. He didn't want to shut it off as he was afraid it would not start again outside the shop at minus 35 and we were in the start of a 3 week cold snap. The 1957 Mack B-61 with the 170, cracked a piston that night. We ran that old grain truck for 5 years with a cracked piston. At the end of its life he would drain 3 gallons of water from the oil pan in the morning. We were running 80-90 gear oil for engine oil. It would steam out 5 gallons of water in a 6 mile run to the field, and for the first start in the morning it would take a can and a half of ether to start it. My dad said, "I buy Mack trucks, because if you can start it, it will get you home."
Try this again on a engine that isn't worn-out 110%, and try not too hold it to the floor on startup, lol, the effort you guys put into your projects is second to none, you are all awesome, great video, and thanks for sharing.
Yes, with a healthy engine with around 100.000 run.
They may not have any newer engines in that area of Russia that's why this guy is so experienced!
Should try it again with a synthetic oil and see how it flows in thows temps. Keep up the videos!!
Synthetic is the way to go in those kind of temperatures!🌡Would like to see the engine with it at those temps!!
Wouldn't make a different on this car. The lubrication of this engine is GARBAGE. It's a good thing though that it's all cast iron and you can rev the fuck out of it even like this. I would like to see the same test on a modern engine. Modern lubrication systems are much better at circulating cold thick oil.
@@xXturbo86Xx true. But it’s not just about oil circulation but Metallurgy
I always have great sympathy towards the Russians who make their videos translated and available for us, who don't understand sh!t in Russian. Спасибо тебе друг !
Im an aviation nut.... The Russian's when they flew their old radials in these same conditions, would add petrol to the oil to thin it out. Then as the engine warmed the oil would get to temperatures and all the petrol in the oil would burn off. Its actually in the manual.
It’s call dilution of oil and still in use in northen canada
Oil dilution was used before shutdown. There is a shutdown chart that specifies the amount of time the dilution switch is activated for the expected start air temperature
We could call this Lada "Skittles" due to all the different colors of green it has.
50 shades of green
@@georgobergfell soviet green....yep I watch bald and bankrupt
Definitely cool as I've never seen anything like this before. This why engine block heaters are used at this temperature. Nice job! I'd like to see this on the transmission.
That was interesting, thank you. :) And hello from Alberta Canada....looking for -42C shortly after Christmas here, thank goodness for block heaters. :) Merry Christmas and stay warm.
Nearly chocked when he said not that cold -24 🤣😂
Normal winter weather. Was like that In finland still a few weeks ago. Did only wear boxers and jeans all winter. 😁
When it warms up to a balmy -24 below. Bin there done that.
@@manuelsilva1999 Yeah, I have done my time too. Makes me want to get a green card and move to some place like Texas or Arizona. If some one offered me a job in Flagstaff I would be there in a flash!
i was broke down once in MN at -22f waiting for a tow truck. belt broke so no water pump and no heat. ive experienced -45f as well in MT. its freaky how that kind of cold feels. all you can do is dress in layers.
@@_AndromedaGalaxy_ I live in western Canada. If I'm traveling in the winter through cold weather I have a survival kit that includes a parka good for -45C, thermal pants, candles and some high calorie food like trail mix. If I have passengers I insist that they equip themselves for an emergency. Before I went to university I was a surveyor so I know about being out in cold weather. On the survey crew I was standing at the instrument in -40C with a 30k north wind for 2 hours - we spent the rest of the day in the truck. The problem with weather like that is all you have to is look at something wrong and it breaks!!!
My first car, when aged 17, was a 1977 Vauxhall Chevette and it suffered the exact same failure of the gear between the camsaft and oil pump / distributor. Fixed it and I've been fixing cars ever since.
I love it how you guys are like " nah , it got warmer since this morning".
-24 deg. celsius
and Vlad doesn't even have his winter jacket zipped up all the way lmfao.
You guys are epic, cheers from RO
@jamexxxxxxxx this is true
After -40 rises up to -20ish you will feel quite warm.
I’m a school bus driver, and in the winter time sometimes we put these little electric blanket things under the oil pan to warm up the oil for this reason. Also, all buses are plugged into trickle chargers whenever they bit being being driven, especially overnight. Both of those things help a ton!
Built-in oil and coolant heaters are an option on many trucks.
Wow!! What an awesome channel! This is a lot like Kerosan English which is a lot like this. This poor Lada was the hero here but really the start and the battery are the true tough guys lol. Love from Canada 🇨🇦 ❤
The voice of the mould man is great! All the different voices of the translator is one of the reasons I love this channel so much.😂👍
The metal shavings turned the oil black really fast. lol
Just leftover oil that clings to the inside of the engine. Just carbon
Considering they are using mineral oil it's likely just breaking up any and all carbon buildup since they didn't even bother flushing the engine, so a bit of old oil too.
@@SilvaDreams Hmm, it seemed like they flushed it twice even. Maybe it's just how it's cut?
@@SilvaDreams He said it would be flushed, or at least go through an extra oil change prior, no other reason they'd be unwrapping multiple oil filters.
It's old oil. An oil change or flush doesn't clean up an engine's Insides to "as new ". Depends how its been treated.
Sta ti je Lada, uvek pali! ;-) Greetings from Serbia
I love how the translators voice changes when he dubs the other guy
That's a job done with love and care.
All I could hear was the whining of the poor starter...
Froze the lada and when it doesn’t stay running ask what’s wrong with you. Hahahaha love the ladas wish we had them in the states. Y’all make amazing video very entertaining and well worth a watch.
So the moral of this story is, Frozen oil is essentially the same as no oil.
Nothing creeps me out more than getting out of work after an 8 or more hour day, and seeing people start their cars and IMMEDIATELY drive off
And run it to redline, I'm guilty of being lazy a couple of days but I want my car to last my life time.
But that is the best way actually. If the oil pump can pump oil in idle, it can also pump oil under load. And even better with higher revs. Just don't floor it like a mad man. Idling doesn't really take much and the oil takes longer to get to temperature. And in some countries it is forbidden to let your car idle just to get it to temperature.
this is quickly becoming my favourite RUclips channel
10:50 never thought I’d feel sorry for a Lada
That's how you properly warm up a Lada at -30°C.
*Valve float has entered the chat*
Same 😢
Spun bearings has entered the chat
@@vasiliansotirov6976 I had a TU 1.1L engine once that had low compression and dropped liners, I bounced it off the limiter for about 5 seconds and managed to spin 3 of the 4 bearings in that time
Maybe you can do the same thing with different grade of oils. 5w-30, 10w-40 etc in -30c environment? See how fast they can start lubricate top of the engine.
Wrong channel mate
That would be useful to see. And interesting for those of us who live in Siberian climates.
Sounds like something project farm would do
@@georgobergfell I was thinking the same :D
its been a fat minute since i've seen this channel. love it. keep it up. its binge time
im just wondering how this channel still not reaching 1mil subs
Diehard batteries never ever did a test this drastic. This was impressive.
Indeed, the battery was the most impressive part of this test.
Batteries CCA is tested at -18 celsius
I have a Diehard in my Hyundai, been starting on 2-3 crank all week in -45C.
Love factory engine block heater. Has saved my butt numerous times.
More Transparent stuff YES :)
I don't know why but i laughed my asssssss off at the engine screaming!
It was like "I'm not getting any oil up here!"
Yeah! We are really interested in your more and more transparent stuff, please do keep making these videos and we your fans are here to support you till death.
One of best channel on the planet 👌 👏.
9:36 "HOOCH KOOCH KOOchoo..."
😂🤣😂
literally LMFAOOO
The engine whisperer
These boys need a lesson in cold starts from our favorite frostback
Battery 🔋 and starter are winners here!
Here jn Montreal it hits minus 30-40 degrees as well and my Toyota Corolla 09 always starts!
Would love to see a recent Corolla or Civic see a transparent valve and oil pan cover test with synthetic oil!
Bodge artist: I thought you can't mould polycarbonate?
Pro: So did we.
I can't be the only one who would rather read subtitles than hear this voiceover, right?