Car Question Acceleration vs. Engine Life

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the impact of different acceleration methods on engine longevity. Participants explore the effects of rapid acceleration followed by coasting versus maintaining a constant lower RPM to reach a desired speed. The conversation touches on theoretical considerations, practical implications, and various factors influencing engine wear.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that accelerating quickly and coasting may be better for fuel efficiency but questions its impact on engine life.
  • Another participant raises the complexity of the question, noting that the wear from acceleration could outweigh the benefits of coasting, depending on various factors such as acceleration intensity and engine design.
  • A hypothesis is presented that slower acceleration may lead to better engine longevity due to reduced forces on lubrication, with considerations for oil shear and vehicle weight.
  • It is noted that friction increases logarithmically with engine speed and load, implying that higher loads could lead to more wear, but well-maintained engines can still achieve high mileage regardless of driving style.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the relationship between acceleration methods and engine longevity, with no consensus reached on the best approach. The discussion remains unresolved as various factors and hypotheses are considered.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge that numerous variables, such as driving style, engine design, maintenance practices, and oil performance, could influence the outcomes discussed, but these factors are not fully explored or resolved.

devecseri
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What's going to let an engine last longer:

1) Accelerating quickly to just above desired speed and coasting until speed drops

2) Holding engine at a more constant lower rpm to achieve that desired speed

I know to some extent 1) is better for fuel when the acceleration isn't too hard but that's not what I'm asking
 
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Automatic or stick?
 
This is impossible to answer. In theory the loads under acceleration would impart more wear than the benefit gained from coasting (and I'll assume shifting to neutral while coasting). But that could change based on how hard you accelerate each time, numerous design details in the engine, how the engine responds to idling, etc., etc.
 
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Likes   Reactions: gjonesy
Sounds about right
 
my hypothesis is, slow to speed will always win for this question in this context. the reason being, heavy acceleration puts way more force onto the lubrication and depending on how much force is needed the oil might shear. heavy car vs light car will make a diff, etc.

if there is guarantee that the motor oil does not shear under all test conditions, and every mating surface is protected in some way, then there is likely no diff in longevity of the motor, well, constant sudden bursts from injectors may have a negative impact.
 
Friction increases logrithmically. Higher engine speeds with higher loads will cause more wear. However, even an engine driven vigorously but well maintained will last 2 to 3 hundred thousand miles. I am a technician and see quarter million mile cars every week. Some of these are beat so wear by driving style is not as important as wear from lack of maintenance.
 
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