Sponsored

Short driving trips

jmurph

Well-Known Member
First Name
jake
Joined
Apr 18, 2021
Threads
21
Messages
248
Reaction score
315
Location
Alaska
Vehicle(s)
2021 XLT Ranger
Occupation
Gov
I too have the same problem. 10 minutes to 15 minutes on a work on a bad day. I just turned 3000 miles and had my oil changed to full synthetic. However I have been working from home for the last year and bought my truck during this period. So I don't even drive it some days. I do get to go to the office once a week to take care of stuff. My mileage is not doing very good. 18.5 or so. I did however get 20.1 on the last full tank due to some highway driving around the metro area. I still really need a long trip and burn a whole tank and see if it get's better. I am using 93 octane. after the first free tank from the dealer. I do have a couple of trips towing my tent trailer coming up late July and late August.
I've noticed the ranger doesn't get great city/ short trip mpg like my f150 but gets far better highway at almost 28 mpg on road trips
Sponsored

 

Samsquanch

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2021
Threads
13
Messages
376
Reaction score
833
Location
Maryland
Vehicle(s)
2017 Expedition XLT
You should change your oil more often. It’s cheap insurance. Short trips and direct injection engines don’t mix but there’s nothing you can do about it. I don’t let my truck sit an warm up an excessive amount of time either that’s an antiquated practice and will add to fuel dilution which is one of the concerns on short tripping. When the engine doesn’t get up to operating temperature the blow by doesn’t get a chance to evaporate and get sent back to the intake to burn off. Adding longer trips gives the engine a chance at operating temp to volatilize all the fuel, water, and other contaminants out of the oil and send it back through the intake.

think of it like this. If you put a put a cup of water into a pot it doesn’t flash out of the pan as soon as it hits boiling. Depending how much water is in the pot you can determine how long the pot needs to stay hot for the water to disappear. Short trips is like adding a few drops the the pot each time but not letting it get hot enough to boil it all off. Eventually you have a pot full of water. The only way to get the water out now is to drain the pot and start over.

if I was in your shoes I would use cheaper to-spec oil and change it no more than every 5k miles. These engines should do fine on 10k mile intervals when driven at highway speeds at full operating temp but your situation is much different.
 

EJH

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ed
Joined
Oct 7, 2020
Threads
17
Messages
932
Reaction score
1,832
Location
Oregon
Vehicle(s)
Subarus, 2021 Ranger
Occupation
Engineer
Short trips just means your oil life is alot less but otherwise you will be fine with letting your engine warmup before driving, as with most turbo cars letting it idle for a few minutes before pulling out of your parking spot is ideal.
Most modern vehicles with a factory turbo will not allow boost until the engine reaches a certain warm up.

Both my 2016 Subaru Forester XT and the Ranger act like this. It is easier to notice on the Subaru as it has a boost gauge.

No need to idle in your driveway. That just wastes gas, IMHO.
 

HenryMac

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Sep 14, 2019
Threads
66
Messages
2,783
Reaction score
5,360
Location
Colorado
Vehicle(s)
2019 SuperCab XL - FX4 - Magnetic - Rocksliders
Occupation
Mech. Engineer - Retired
Read your owners manual where it's clearly defined. Continuous short trips aren't good but the manual addresses that too.
Clearly defined may be an overstatement. I just looked and didn't see any information in the owners manual about short trips. Maybe I overlooked it?
 

Tom_C

Well-Known Member
First Name
Tom
Joined
Apr 17, 2021
Threads
35
Messages
1,972
Reaction score
4,389
Location
Virginia, USA
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ranger Lariat SuperCab FX4
Occupation
System Admin, Retired
Clearly defined may be an overstatement. I just looked and didn't see any information in the owners manual about short trips. Maybe I overlooked it?
It's easy to do in the ranger manual. It's horrible.
 


Dr. Zaius

Well-Known Member
First Name
Dennis
Joined
Dec 20, 2019
Threads
76
Messages
6,655
Reaction score
40,605
Location
Living The Dream
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger XLT FX4
Clearly defined may be an overstatement. I just looked and didn't see any information in the owners manual about short trips. Maybe I overlooked it?
It's not there unless they refer to it as something that doesn't contain the word "short"
 

aeroshots

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 30, 2020
Threads
2
Messages
387
Reaction score
937
Location
Florida
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ranger
They were fine. I just changed oil on the severe schedule. Take long drive on Sunday and figured it would be ok. Or at least seemed fine. My mechanic always said oil looked perfect anyway
You already have lots of opinions here. Here's one more. ? it is what it is unless you wanted an excuse to look for another job far away. I think you're just fine with your plans.
 

Msfitoy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sid
Joined
Mar 5, 2019
Threads
67
Messages
9,191
Reaction score
28,344
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger, 2003 MINI Cooper S, 2021 Honda CT125
Occupation
NWO Robot Polisher
Vehicle Showcase
1
Hello brand new 2021 ranger tremor xlt owner and I have no experience with this engine. I live 3 minutes from where I work so normally I’ll be doing very short trips everyday to work and back. On Sundays I will usually have about a 20 mile trip each way. How bad is this for this engine? And do I need to change oil a lot sooner? Also is this any issue for my break in period? Thanks all!
You'll ruin the truck in no time...take 30 mile lunch trips everyday...that's how I manage to have a 70,000 miles trouble free Ranger...your truck hates not being driven and will self destruct soon if neglected... ?
 
OP
OP
JalanX

JalanX

Well-Known Member
First Name
J
Joined
Jun 20, 2021
Threads
22
Messages
148
Reaction score
299
Location
Alexandria
Vehicle(s)
2021 Ford Ranger Tremor XLT
Occupation
Project manager
Lol I forgot about this for a few days. Thanks for all the responses. On weekends it will go for a long drive and during the week I’ll have a couple longer drives here and there. Oil every 3000. May do the first one at 1000. Cheers!
 

AzScorpion

Moderator
First Name
Dave
Joined
Jul 25, 2019
Threads
335
Messages
26,220
Reaction score
131,993
Location
Back Home In AZ!
Vehicle(s)
2023 Ford Ranger Tremor
Occupation
Retired...Full Time Slacker

FoD

Well-Known Member
First Name
Terry
Joined
Jun 26, 2020
Threads
20
Messages
2,590
Reaction score
9,848
Location
Out There
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger XLT FX4
Occupation
Retired & Grandparenting 🤣
Vehicle Showcase
1
You'll ruin the truck in no time...take 30 mile lunch trips everyday...that's how I manage to have a 70,000 miles trouble free Ranger...your truck hates not being driven and will self destruct soon if neglected... ?
Damn, I'd drive for a good burger, but not 30 miles...you must be going for the beer!!?
 

dondonbabyraptor

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brandon
Joined
Jan 27, 2021
Threads
41
Messages
2,194
Reaction score
6,249
Location
San Diego
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ford Ranger Lariat
Occupation
I/O Psych MSc student
Short trips just means your oil life is alot less but otherwise you will be fine with letting your engine warmup before driving, as with most turbo cars letting it idle for a few minutes before pulling out of your parking spot is ideal.
I often take a good bit of short trips here and there living in the city and all. I tend to let my car idle until the RPM drops from 1200 idle to 900 idle, indicating things have settled a bit. Generally 30 seconds or less of idle= 15-20 degrees temp change until it settles and I drive it easy until the cylinder temp is settled at 194-198. I am not sure if this helps, but from your comment it seems to be the right move.
 

jmurph

Well-Known Member
First Name
jake
Joined
Apr 18, 2021
Threads
21
Messages
248
Reaction score
315
Location
Alaska
Vehicle(s)
2021 XLT Ranger
Occupation
Gov
I often take a good bit of short trips here and there living in the city and all. I tend to let my car idle until the RPM drops from 1200 idle to 900 idle, indicating things have settled a bit. Generally 30 seconds or less of idle= 15-20 degrees temp change until it settles and I drive it easy until the cylinder temp is settled at 194-198. I am not sure if this helps, but from your comment it seems to be the right move.
Engines are made to run af certain Temps for tolerances, it doesn't really matter but it's 39 seconds of piece of mind to my ocd
Sponsored

 
 








Top