Wanted to share a story of my New Years eve with you...
Spent the night at a Breckenridge, CO ski house with some buddies and had to park the car outside surrounded by snow plow drifts. The overnight low got to about -10F, in the morning I went out to start the car up and warm it up, which it did but was cranky about it.
Made it to the ski resort, but parked in a pretty exposed area. The high for that day was -8 but with windchills reaching -28. As you can guess it was a cold day snowboarding.
Anyway get back to the car around 3:30, try to start it up and no dice... Battery is working great, starter is trying but the engine won't turn over.
We think maybe the battery is just too cold to give enough amperage to the plugs so we hook the battery it to my friends Subaru (which started up just fine). Still no go.
Getting creative now we push the car down the parking lot in drive (which is weird that you can do in a frozen automatic) to get everything moving and still it doesn't start but we do smell some fuel at the exhaust.
By this time we realize either the Oil or the fuel line is frozen and I am not driving this car off the lot.
Call a tow truck, spend $160 to get it back to the house and put it in the heated garage. (Rental house, I can't afford luxuries like that)
2 hours later the car starts up like nothing was ever the matter, and I just keep it running for 30 minutes to get everything warmed up and haven't had a problem since.
Moral of the story... Every our snow rabbits have have a tolerance for cold!
Anyone have any similar extreme cold weather stories?
PS. 4 years Roadside assistance is based on the build date of the car, not the model year. Turns out my 2007 was built in September and thats when my roadside assistance ran out. Even though no one told me that...
Spent the night at a Breckenridge, CO ski house with some buddies and had to park the car outside surrounded by snow plow drifts. The overnight low got to about -10F, in the morning I went out to start the car up and warm it up, which it did but was cranky about it.
Made it to the ski resort, but parked in a pretty exposed area. The high for that day was -8 but with windchills reaching -28. As you can guess it was a cold day snowboarding.
Anyway get back to the car around 3:30, try to start it up and no dice... Battery is working great, starter is trying but the engine won't turn over.
We think maybe the battery is just too cold to give enough amperage to the plugs so we hook the battery it to my friends Subaru (which started up just fine). Still no go.
Getting creative now we push the car down the parking lot in drive (which is weird that you can do in a frozen automatic) to get everything moving and still it doesn't start but we do smell some fuel at the exhaust.
By this time we realize either the Oil or the fuel line is frozen and I am not driving this car off the lot.
Call a tow truck, spend $160 to get it back to the house and put it in the heated garage. (Rental house, I can't afford luxuries like that)
2 hours later the car starts up like nothing was ever the matter, and I just keep it running for 30 minutes to get everything warmed up and haven't had a problem since.
Moral of the story... Every our snow rabbits have have a tolerance for cold!
Anyone have any similar extreme cold weather stories?
PS. 4 years Roadside assistance is based on the build date of the car, not the model year. Turns out my 2007 was built in September and thats when my roadside assistance ran out. Even though no one told me that...