So I am going to have the state the obvious that seems to be getting over looked on a regular basis. Some people need to open their minds up and pay attention to real world operating conditions and not controlled lab situations or more ideal daily operation. Also understand how YOU operate your vehicle and WHERE your vehicle is operated will VARY GREATLY when compared to the way others operate their vehicle and where their vehicle is operated.
A few things that need to be cleared up that people are also missing. Engine oil temperature is actually more important than engine coolant temperature. Engine oil temperature typically takes twice as long to warm up than compared to engine coolant temperature. With a integral oil cooler in the radiator the engine oil will warm up slightly quicker than a configuration without a integral engine oil cooler in the radiator, BUT the thermostat needs to open to allow warm coolant into the radiator for this to happen. In some cases an integral oil cooler in the radiator will cause the engine oil to take slightly longer to fully warm up due to the additional oil capacity that is in the oil lines and oil cooler as well as the cold coolant will be soaking heat from the oil as it is trying to warm up before the engine thermostat opens. On these trucks with the integral engine oil cooler in the radiator, the oil still typically takes twice a long to warm up and catch up to close to the nominal engine coolant temperature.
So will excessive bearing wear happen from allowing the engine to warm up at an idle every day you own the vehicle, NO. Will the bearings wear more than if you started the engine and allowed it to run 30 seconds, then drive normally, YES. Just think about the engine run hours alone if you allowed the vehicle to idle 15 minutes before driving every start or many starts during the cold or warm weather. Every revolution the engine takes will cause component wear, so the less revolutions, the less wear.
So here is the spoiler that EVERYONE is missing. I think we can all agree that engines run Richer at idle than while cruising. With modern DI engines fuel dilution is a MAJOR problem. The problem varies a lot on how the vehicle is used. Remote starting or starting or even manually starting the engine and allowing the engine to idle to warm up or cool off the cabin for 10-15+ minutes, colder ambient temperatures are more problematic that warmer ambient temperatures, short in town trips, majority city driving, allowing the Auto Stop/Start feature to be enabled full time, extended idling at drive thru or car pool lines, stop and go traffic, DFM being enabled, towing and hauling heavy loads and so forth are hell on the engine oil. Keep in mind that fuel diluted oil will be consumed by the engine easier and quicker leading to the engine oil level dropping.
Many driver/owners these days are not manually checking the engine oil level on a regular basis. Check the engine oil at LEAST every 1000 miles max, or probably every other fill up would be wise habit. Not checking the engine oil manually then allows the engine to up running up to 2 quarts low on oil until the oil light comes on if the engine is consuming oil at a decent rate. 1 qt/1000 miles could mean you need to add 4-5+ quarts between oil changes. Part of the reason oil levels are not checked regularly, we have been conditioned with port fuel injected engines and modern design and assembly practices that led to a drop in oil consumption AND also many newer engines have done away with the dipstick! I often use the dipstick to check the oil level, look at the oil color and smell the oil for fuel. While I can’t determine the exact percentage of fuel in the oil with my nose, I can surely determine if the oil has a higher than expected fuel smell and/or a darker color that I do not like. In these cases I should probably change the oil sooner than some mileage window.
During the time the engine oil is low, the fuel concentration is likely higher, until you add 2 fresh quarts of oil, which then immediately drops the fuel concentration in the oil and if you add make up oil between oil changes, you are effectively diluting out the fuel percentage, this is a good thing, but if you are performing oil analysis at time of oil changes you may get a false sense of what is really going on in the crankcase. I hope the fuel dilution variation is obvious just by adding fresh make up oil.
Here is the other BIG spoiler, while the engine temp may be up to 160F, but understand the oil will likely only be at 80F. So all the lower end reciprocating components are still much, much cooler than the engine coolant temperature. Additionally the oil squirtters are bathing the bottom of the pistons and cylinder walls with colder engine oil that is approximately ½ the engine coolant temperature.
Let’s not forget the engine cooling system has a thermostat, that limits the flow of warmer coolant into radiator, so even if the engine has an integral engine oil cooler in the radiator, the engine oil cooler is not getting bathed in warm coolant until AFTER the thermostat opens and even when some thermostats open, they cycle a few times Open/Closed before the engine coolant temperature stabilizes at a nominal operating temperature.
So again, the engine oil cooler is actually in the wrong location to some extent to be helpful for cold start operation. I have seen engine oil coolers that are hybrid air/coolant coolers that circulate the engine coolant while the thermostat is still closed, in this case for cold start operations, this becomes an “oil warmer”.
Some may say, well when I changed my oil, I had an oil analysis performed and the fuel dilution was in the low range and acceptable. This is good, BUT, understand over the lifespan that the oil is in the engine, the fuel dilution percentage can change and become lower as some of the fuel is “cooked off” during longer highway cruises and fresh make up oil being aded. But the opposite can also occur, some operating conditions can actually increase the fuel contamination as well.
Here is the catch; the percentage of fuel in the oil can and will vary over the lifetime that the oil is in the engine (meaning between each change interval). A lot depends on outside ambient temperatures, the colder the temps, the greater the fuel contamination. Then factor in all the non ideal usage of the vehicle and other variables. Longer highway drives likely will cook off fuel in the crankcase at a higher percentage maybe getting the oil back in the “acceptable” range along with adding make up oil.
Few will likely agree with me on this issue. Engine coolant temperature is a false indicator of when the engine is fully warmed up. Engines warm up much faster when driven than when sitting at idle and the engine is not running as rich a fuel mixture when the engine is under light to moderate load then when at idle. Fuel concentration in the engine oil is a moving target, depending on how the vehicle is used can impact the amount of fuel in the oil drastically.
All I can say, is you do you. You do what you believe in. But one fact is clean oil is better than dirty oil and oil is far cheaper than replacing internal metal parts in an engine. Modern DI gasoline engines are very different animals from the days of carburetors, throttle body injection and port fuel injection. How the foolish oil companies and oil filter suppliers are pushing 10,000-20,000+ mileages with their products and some people are buying into this nonsense. I have no plans on testing how long I can push my OCI or allow the engine to “warm up” before driving, because I understand what is actually going to happen to the engine oil and the engine in the long run and it is not pretty.
Starting with a 0W20 oil that is likely borderline for this engine due to the High Torque/Low RPM operations, add fuel to the oil, run the engine low on oil, do you really think this will allow these engines to get to 250,000 miles? There are just a few steps each of use and owners can do to extend the life of any engine. Common sense oil maintenance is what needs to be considered.