Each morning, countless drivers start their cars and drive off within seconds — a habit born of routine and hurry. Yet mechanics say this small act of impatience quietly shortens the life of the engine. What feels like saving time can, over years, wear away at the heart of the machine itself.
After a long night of rest, an engine’s oil has settled. When the ignition turns, the pump needs about 30 to 40 seconds to circulate lubricant through every moving part. If you shift into gear immediately, those components begin moving before full protection is in place. The result is friction — microscopic scratches that slowly accumulate into real mechanical wear.
In one mechanic’s workshop, the evidence was unmistakable: an engine whose owner habitually started and drove off right away had bearings so worn they required precision grinding and replacement — a repair both costly and avoidable.
The advice from experts is simple and enduring:
Give your car half a minute of patience before you move, especially on cold mornings. Avoid sudden acceleration until the temperature stabilizes.
This short pause, almost invisible in a busy day, can prevent years of damage and thousands in repairs. More than that, it’s a quiet reminder — whether in how we treat our machines or ourselves — that endurance grows from respect for beginnings, from letting things warm before asking them to perform.