Taking the 8 out of winter storage
#1
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Taking the 8 out of winter storage
Hey guys, well the end of winter is 3 weeks away and i'm already thinking about what i have to do to get her ready for the road again. This is the first time i've put her away for the winter and i'm going on common sense for what i have to do in the spring.
When i put the car away i had the oil changed, really gave the car a good cleaning inside and out, over inflated the tires (to just under limit), pulled the battery and put it on a trickle charger, then rolled the car in the garage, put a car cover on her and closed the door.
When i take her out in the spring I'm going to lower the tire pressure, obviously put the battery back in, then get the oil changed again (is that necessary???).
Let me know if i'm doing anything wrong!!!
Thanks
When i put the car away i had the oil changed, really gave the car a good cleaning inside and out, over inflated the tires (to just under limit), pulled the battery and put it on a trickle charger, then rolled the car in the garage, put a car cover on her and closed the door.
When i take her out in the spring I'm going to lower the tire pressure, obviously put the battery back in, then get the oil changed again (is that necessary???).
Let me know if i'm doing anything wrong!!!
Thanks
#2
My 8 looks like a Smurf
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It's not really necessary to change the oil again. Some will argue about shelf life, etc, but I personally don't believe this. As long as your oil is still clean, no harm done.
BTW, why do you remove the battery AND add the trickle charger? It seems to be that defeats the purpose, and you would probably want to use one or the other (personally I just remove the battery).
BTW, why do you remove the battery AND add the trickle charger? It seems to be that defeats the purpose, and you would probably want to use one or the other (personally I just remove the battery).
#3
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I had a trickle charger kicking around, and pulled the battery because i was feeling over cautious... I didnt feel like finding out in the spring that i really should have pulled it! Anyways it only took a few minutes
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its sitting in my garage in the cold... not the greatest for it but i didnt have anywhere else to put it. The charger will help keep it from going flat over the winter (i hope!)
#6
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as for your after winter steps....i think thats all okay. I dont really see much else you could do. i wouldnt change the oil myself, at least not right away. maybe go 2 or 3 k on the oil and do an early oil change. but oil doesnt ususally just break down just sitting there without any running at all. just think how long oil sits in a bottle before you buy it
#7
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Same here; the oil is fine. Just install the battery and lower the tire pressure. If you plugged the exhaust of course be sure to remove that obstruction as well.
Let it warm up fully and then enjoy!
btw: I too leave the battery in the vehicle, on a Battery Tender, all winter. The battery tender won't allow it to overcharge, and it's fine to sit there holding its maximum capacity. I believe a prior poster was thinking of NiCad batteries which should be regularly and fully discharged, not our vehicle's lead-acid type.
Last Friday it was 59 degf here and I had thoughts of an early spring awakening, but yesterday's snow storm dashed those thoughts. A sandy/salty mess again today.
Let it warm up fully and then enjoy!
btw: I too leave the battery in the vehicle, on a Battery Tender, all winter. The battery tender won't allow it to overcharge, and it's fine to sit there holding its maximum capacity. I believe a prior poster was thinking of NiCad batteries which should be regularly and fully discharged, not our vehicle's lead-acid type.
Last Friday it was 59 degf here and I had thoughts of an early spring awakening, but yesterday's snow storm dashed those thoughts. A sandy/salty mess again today.
It's not really necessary to change the oil again. Some will argue about shelf life, etc, but I personally don't believe this. As long as your oil is still clean, no harm done.
BTW, why do you remove the battery AND add the trickle charger? It seems to be that defeats the purpose, and you would probably want to use one or the other (personally I just remove the battery).
BTW, why do you remove the battery AND add the trickle charger? It seems to be that defeats the purpose, and you would probably want to use one or the other (personally I just remove the battery).
Last edited by Huey52; 03-03-2009 at 07:18 AM.
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Its a bad idea to start up a car and only let it warm up in the winter, develops condensation that just sits there. The best way to store a car is to keep it stored.
As for the flat spots, by inflating the tires to their rated side wall pressure you eliminate that problem.
As for the flat spots, by inflating the tires to their rated side wall pressure you eliminate that problem.
#11
i pulled the battery too, but said f it to the trickle charger, gonna pick up a new optima red top this week, gotta pull that stupid clutch pedal out and get it rewelded, hopefully go for an oil change this weekend
#12
My 8 looks like a Smurf
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If you are really worried about flat spots, you can leave the car on jackstands for the winter. Otherwise, slightly over standard tire pressure has worked fine for me so far.
Honestly I think you guys are way too worried about this. I've had several cars parked over winter/summer for the last 4 years now and all you really need to do is add some fuel stabilizer to a full tank. Battery dies? Boost it. Better yet, take it out and bring it inside for winter. Trickle chargers are useful if you leave the battery in the car.
I also wash the car before hand and use a car cover. When you bring it out, let it idle on it's own for a few minutes to warm up properly. That's it. Not harder than that.
Honestly I think you guys are way too worried about this. I've had several cars parked over winter/summer for the last 4 years now and all you really need to do is add some fuel stabilizer to a full tank. Battery dies? Boost it. Better yet, take it out and bring it inside for winter. Trickle chargers are useful if you leave the battery in the car.
I also wash the car before hand and use a car cover. When you bring it out, let it idle on it's own for a few minutes to warm up properly. That's it. Not harder than that.
#13
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pros - go to costco or sams club to buy it, you have to pre-order the red for our cars which takes a week or two so go in now and order it. Also thought you were buying the clutch thing from BHR?!?!
#14
charles said i could just reweld it, so might as well save some money that way, i'll spend money later this summer for a newer pedal.
i heard costco has it the cheapest, gotta go with my uncle to buy it, or pick up a membership
i heard costco has it the cheapest, gotta go with my uncle to buy it, or pick up a membership
#18
Dodging those Corollas
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Jay what do you drive in the winter now?
BTW, it's amazing what 2 days of continuously driving above 5500 rpm can do. It makes the engine so much better afterwards, and also drinks 3/4 bottle of oil in 2 days!!
I highly recommend people to do this once or twice a year just to clear out the carbon deposits and crap... high rpm driving for a few days.
BTW, it's amazing what 2 days of continuously driving above 5500 rpm can do. It makes the engine so much better afterwards, and also drinks 3/4 bottle of oil in 2 days!!
I highly recommend people to do this once or twice a year just to clear out the carbon deposits and crap... high rpm driving for a few days.
#21
Well as usual I have a completely different opinion (lol). I have a 22 year old car that spends 99% of its life in storage, and this what I do. Inflate high performance tires to 50-60 lbs when storing your car. They wont blow up or anything like that. When you take your car out of storage each year that is a great time to swap all the fluids out. I am assuming this is a car you love, not just an appliance to drive of course. I change ALL the fluids everyspring and I mean all of them. Engine oil, coolant, brake fluid, power steering, trans and diff. Its expensive yes, but I have 22 years on the same engine etc to prove it works. You don't have to any of it, its called preventative maintenance! (lol) Just my opinion so dont castrate me!
#25
F***in BS Mazdas engineering. Trying to get the clutch pedal off, managed to get everything of but the last remaining clip and nut.
The clip wont budge, dont want to be to aggressive, cause I think its the start switch, and since the weld snapped, its sitting on top of the last bolt preventing the socket from getting a grip on it, and of course it has to the be bolt thats tucked at the top by the footrest side.
BS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The clip wont budge, dont want to be to aggressive, cause I think its the start switch, and since the weld snapped, its sitting on top of the last bolt preventing the socket from getting a grip on it, and of course it has to the be bolt thats tucked at the top by the footrest side.
BS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!