I didn’t dismis them. I said they’d be expensive to run because they’d have to heat the coolant hot enough to open the thermostat. How else could it circulate the coolant?
It would take less power to run them in a climate that doesn’t experience consistant -20 to -40.
Yep. Although, to be honest, newer cars with fuel injection are way, way, way better than older (25+ years) carbureted models. But still, plugging your car in in -40 weather is a good thing.
Totally. If you catch someone doing that, I would completely support public punishment for them. Freezing them to a post in a public place would work for me.
A lot of jobs do have places you can plug in during the day, but a lot don’t, too. If you have to park all day without plugging in, everyone goes out at lunch and starts their cars and lets them run for a few minutes so they’ll still start when you go out after work to go home.
It is a universal rule of etiquette in Western Canada - you don’t mess with someone else’s car-plugging-in cord. You just don’t. Even punk-ass idiot kids don’t mess with them (probably because it’s too cold for their little lily asses).
I would go with the cord under the hood of the car and then just wrap it around your rearview mirror when you drive off. No more cords for asshole thieves!
Many jobsites and some public areas supply block-heater outlets, usually with signs stating they’re for block heaters only because many cars, though it seems fewer than in years gone by perhaps because of the newer materials used inside passenger compartments, have in-car electric car warmers. They used to screw into the bottom of dashboards.
They, too, have a plug hanging out the grill area and the car warmer is plugged in overnight to keep frost from forming on the windows.
Some apartment blocks and probably some public areas with outlets have interupters linked into the block-heater circuitry. They turn the power off and on twice a second. I lived in such a block.
But now I use a remote control that I point through the window to turn the power on and off. The block-heater extension plugs into a gizmo that the remote control turns on and off. The gizmo, in turn, plugs into the outside socket.
Other people use timers instead of such a gizmo, especially if their routine is the same each day. Apparently a rule of thumb states a block heater needn’t be on more than four cosecutive hours, not all night.
I don’t know if that still holds, though. And I had two cars, both V8s, that had a block heater for each bank of cylinders. Those cars didn’t need four hours.
A car in a good state of repair likely would start without being plugged in anyway. The point of a block heater is also to help the oil flow immediately upon startinq the engine so it isn’t starved of oil before the oil is warm enough to flow. Synthetic oil helps in that regard, too.
Face it. That virus of American greed, me first, self-entitlement and pure selfishness has finally gotten through Customs and crossed the border into Canada. There is no turning back. You’re no longer a virgin.
The level of discourtesy rises to a particular level. “Do not piss in the well” is enough of a social norm that no sign needs to be posted. The same holds true of stealing extension cords on the Prairies.
Beautiful art, but I’d be concerned the thief would be a total dick and cut the male connector off the block heater, so he could slip that cord out of the lock. Which would be far worse than just having your extension cord stolen I assume.
That’s a good point. If we’re prepping for massive dickishness, or cuntishness as the case may be, I guess securing the extension cord to a fixed object like the outlet post or the car itself would be better.
Exactly. Oh no, I just thought of something - kids aren’t learning to drive any more, so more of the little assholes will probably be stealing extension cords because they won’t understand what a truly shitty thing that is to do.
I wish laws would be changed to allow deadly force to be used against those committing an act of theft. After a few criminals have been shot during the commission of their crimes, I have a feeling shit like this would much more rare.