Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Diesel engines don’t like extreme cold, but you should be fine in DC.
One of my ski instructors in Colorado had a diesel car and got stranded trying to get home over a pass one day when it was really cold. He was lucky that a family in a house near where his car died let him come in and hang out until a friend could rescue him.
Facts aren't straight here. Keeping a diesel running in the cold is not a problem. STARTING a diesel in the cold is though. Diesels will usually have engine block warmers (you plug them in overnight). It's also why truck drivers in very cold weather will just leave the truck engine running all night. I actually did that with my car a few times, knowing that if I turned off the engine, it would never start the next morning.
Anonymous wrote:I would definitely avoid the newer “clean” diesels. They require exhaust fluid or have some other type of emissions system that must periodically be serviced. They are FAR more complicated and expensive to service than gasoline vehicles.
Now, if it’s an older diesel, more than 10 years old, before all the emissions stuff, then go for it. Those are fantastic.
But the new diesels suck total ass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Diesel engines don’t like extreme cold, but you should be fine in DC.
One of my ski instructors in Colorado had a diesel car and got stranded trying to get home over a pass one day when it was really cold. He was lucky that a family in a house near where his car died let him come in and hang out until a friend could rescue him.
Facts aren't straight here. Keeping a diesel running in the cold is not a problem. STARTING a diesel in the cold is though. Diesels will usually have engine block warmers (you plug them in overnight). It's also why truck drivers in very cold weather will just leave the truck engine running all night. I actually did that with my car a few times, knowing that if I turned off the engine, it would never start the next morning.
Anonymous wrote:Diesel engines don’t like extreme cold, but you should be fine in DC.
One of my ski instructors in Colorado had a diesel car and got stranded trying to get home over a pass one day when it was really cold. He was lucky that a family in a house near where his car died let him come in and hang out until a friend could rescue him.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks so much! It is a range rover which I did not want to see you because I know how people perceive them on DCUMA new model, probably 2018.
A new model, probably 2018.