In trying to diagnose poor efficiency of a converted Miata, Seattle EVA members have zeroed in on transmission grease (which is actually heavy oil; 80w-90 in my converted Karmann Ghia). The i-MiEV uses ATF, which is generally thinner than what's found in manual transmissions, but I haven't found an actual viscosity spec for "Mitsubishi genuine Dia-Queen ATF SP III"
Point is, I wonder how much this stuff thickens up in the cold and how much that could contribute to reduced winter range. A stick-on block heater on the tranny may offer better 'bang for the buck' than some of the battery heating options that have been discussed. The only ways I fathom that heating the transmission up to say, 90 degrees F to start the day could cause harm would be if the hot spot gets too hot too fast and adding a daily thermal cycle could cause metal fatigue, or thermal variations within that transaxle could cause friction between close-tolerance parts...
Anybody collected data that could zero in on the effect of a cold gearbox (without the effect of cold batteries, tires, heater use, etc..)?
Point is, I wonder how much this stuff thickens up in the cold and how much that could contribute to reduced winter range. A stick-on block heater on the tranny may offer better 'bang for the buck' than some of the battery heating options that have been discussed. The only ways I fathom that heating the transmission up to say, 90 degrees F to start the day could cause harm would be if the hot spot gets too hot too fast and adding a daily thermal cycle could cause metal fatigue, or thermal variations within that transaxle could cause friction between close-tolerance parts...
Anybody collected data that could zero in on the effect of a cold gearbox (without the effect of cold batteries, tires, heater use, etc..)?