Notices
RX-8 Discussion General discussion about the RX-8 that doesn't fit in one of the specialty forums.
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by: CARiD

Soo. I just picked up my car today and drove it for LOTS of hours...Question..

Thread Tools
 
Rate Thread
 
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:03 PM
  #1  
Alano's Avatar
Thread Starter
07 Phantom Blue Owner
 
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
From: Wayne. NJ
Soo. I just picked up my car today and drove it for LOTS of hours...Question..

Well this is my first manual car, and actually, im doing pretty damn good learning. I learned downshifting, starting etc, only stalled 2 times, guess it could be worse. Well we drove the car for about 6 hours today. Poor thing needs to rest. I have a question though, is it normal for the cabin to start to heat up? Or is something wrong?
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:11 PM
  #2  
Brandon's Avatar
Registered
 
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 142
Likes: 0
From: Madison, WI
If you're just driving around town, yeah. I've found my transmission tunnel gets a little warm, and it seems the vents always blow a little warm unless I get it over 30 mph.
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:17 PM
  #3  
Transam kid 01's Avatar
The anti-ricer
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,888
Likes: 0
From: Hillsdale, NJ
...did you leave your heat on? Even if the air is not on, my car tends to still blow air in and the temperature varies on where the dial is temperature wise (obviously). Check that, see if it is on the highest heat. If so, try putting it all the way to the coldest setting and see if the problem still occurs
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:17 PM
  #4  
Alano's Avatar
Thread Starter
07 Phantom Blue Owner
 
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
From: Wayne. NJ
Well vents were blowing fine. Its just that the cabin started heating up a little. It could have been partially from the sunny day, but I think its also from the engine or something...like the hand brake was warm, and the sides of the center console were warm too...normal?
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:18 PM
  #5  
DarkBrew's Avatar
Extraordinary Engineering
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 4,733
Likes: 14
From: Burls On
Welcome to the concept of heat soak. Normal on this car. Normal on a lot of performance coupes.

After hours on the highway I parked for brunch and experienced a lot of heat soak (no sunshine) when we all got back in the car. Everything was hot from the tunnel to the cup holders to the hand brake. I guess I just got used to it; I kind of miss it in the winter.

Last edited by DarkBrew; May 8, 2007 at 09:23 PM.
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:18 PM
  #6  
Transam kid 01's Avatar
The anti-ricer
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,888
Likes: 0
From: Hillsdale, NJ
The cupholder get very warm and the boot of the shift **** tends to as well
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:19 PM
  #7  
Alano's Avatar
Thread Starter
07 Phantom Blue Owner
 
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
From: Wayne. NJ
Originally Posted by Transam kid 01
...did you leave your heat on? Even if the air is not on, my car tends to still blow air in and the temperature varies on where the dial is temperature wise (obviously). Check that, see if it is on the highest heat. If so, try putting it all the way to the coldest setting and see if the problem still occurs
On the bottom of the AC dial, not the one where you can turn to cold or hot, the one inbetween the fan speed, and temperature, that dial on the bottom there are the 2 buttons. One is on at all times, if I press the left one, the other side will turn off, etc, they both wont be off at the same time...could that be the problem or is that normal? I wish I realized they forgot to give me a User Guide a tad bit sooner heh..
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:20 PM
  #8  
Shinka-Dono's Avatar
mildly unexcited
 
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 444
Likes: 0
From: CT
Originally Posted by Alano
Well this is my first manual car, and actually, im doing pretty damn good learning. I learned downshifting, starting etc, only stalled 2 times, guess it could be worse. Well we drove the car for about 6 hours today. Poor thing needs to rest. I have a question though, is it normal for the cabin to start to heat up? Or is something wrong?
No problem. It just likes to spit hot air at you when you rev it up. Open a window.
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 09:21 PM
  #9  
Alano's Avatar
Thread Starter
07 Phantom Blue Owner
 
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 285
Likes: 0
From: Wayne. NJ
Oh ok As long as im not the only one getting this i'm fine...started to get a little nervous for a second. Anyway, MT is pretty damn fun, specially once you start getting the hang of it. I was nervous to pick up the MT, but I figured it really isnt worth the money for the AT..
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 10:55 PM
  #10  
Fritz the Cat's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 323
Likes: 0
From: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
When I picked up my car for the first time, it was a sunny day in April. I drove it to a friend's work down a busy road. All the way there, I couldn't believe how hot the cabin was. At first I had the sunroof open, the windows rolled down, and the vents opened up, but that made no difference. Then I closed all the windows and put on the air conditioner full blast.

That's when I discovered that the seat heater was turned on. Doh!
Reply
Old May 8, 2007 | 11:00 PM
  #11  
nycgps's Avatar
Out of NYC
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 19,881
Likes: 36
From: Planet Earth
its normal for the area around the cup holder and cigarette lighter to get hot, because theres a very very hot about 1500~1600f Catalyst Converter sits right under it. if you have a straight mid pipe you will not get much heat. but thats illegal and very harmful to your and the environment

Not to mention the engine sits right next to your foot. (driver's right side, passenger's left side)

You can take your center console out, and seal it with heat insulate pad. thats what Im going to do before the summer hits.

and dont forget to shield your A/C line. I did it couple weeks ago. getting rdy for the summer baby !

Last edited by nycgps; May 8, 2007 at 11:03 PM.
Reply
Old May 9, 2007 | 08:26 AM
  #12  
DarkBrew's Avatar
Extraordinary Engineering
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 4,733
Likes: 14
From: Burls On
Originally Posted by Alano
On the bottom of the AC dial, not the one where you can turn to cold or hot, the one in between the fan speed, and temperature, that dial on the bottom there are the 2 buttons. One is on at all times, if I press the left one, the other side will turn off, etc, they both wont be off at the same time...could that be the problem or is that normal? I wish I realized they forgot to give me a User Guide a tad bit sooner heh..

I think that the button you're describing switches between fresh air and recirculate air.
Reply
Old May 9, 2007 | 09:32 AM
  #13  
Gambit's Avatar
Screw gas mileage
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 2,179
Likes: 1
From: Marlton, NJ
Originally Posted by Alano
On the bottom of the AC dial, not the one where you can turn to cold or hot, the one inbetween the fan speed, and temperature, that dial on the bottom there are the 2 buttons. One is on at all times, if I press the left one, the other side will turn off, etc, they both wont be off at the same time...could that be the problem or is that normal? I wish I realized they forgot to give me a User Guide a tad bit sooner heh..
that button changes between blowing air from outside and sucking it in from the vent at the windshield, it's either one of the other, so it'll never go off.

You will notice if you leave it on the outside air setting, even with the fan off, that air will blow through the vents with the car moving, so if the heat is up, it'll blow on you with the fan set to 0

If you're cabin is heating up, you might wanna set it to cold and have it blow on your feet, but the center console area will get warm from the transmission being a few inches away
Reply
Old May 9, 2007 | 09:38 AM
  #14  
New Yorker's Avatar
Registered
 
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 3,319
Likes: 58
From: NYC
Originally Posted by DarkBrew
I think that the button you're describing switches between fresh air and recirculate air.
And it should be set at fresh—or what Mazda calls "outside air"—as the default position. The only time you need "recirc" is when you're entering a dusty area (like a construction site), or when you need maximum cooling.

When using A/C, a lot of people mistakenly leave it on "recirculated air" all the time. Yes, for maximum cooling, Mazda says "set the temperature control dial to the extreme cold position and set the air intake selector to the recirculated position, and set the fan control dial to position 4". But that's meant just for a) cooling a hot interior down as quickly as possible, and b) hot, humid, "it's a real scorcher" type weather. In less severe hot weather, you'd switch to "outside air" once the interior cools down and is comfortable. The downside of using "recirc" is that you're breathing the same air over and over and it gets stale. Not healthy—can start to make you feel drowsy.

Outside air position: Outside air is taken into the vehicle. Use this position for normal ventilation and heating.

Recirculated air position: Outside air is shut off. Air within the vehicle is recirculated. This position can be used when driving on a dusty road or in similar conditions. It also helps to provide quicker cooling of the interior.

Finally, Mazda warns against using "recirc" in cold and rainy weather, as it causes the windows to fog up.
Reply
Old May 9, 2007 | 09:45 AM
  #15  
maxxdamigz's Avatar
Baro Rex
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 1,226
Likes: 1
From: NJ
I leave my vents open and on defrost with the temp setting at dead nuetral. If I do some hard driving, I'll be pumping hot engine compartment air into the cabin. In the winter, you don't have the heat on. If you put it on recirc, the amount of heat coming into the cabin decreases a lot.
Reply
Old Jul 4, 2010 | 01:31 PM
  #16  
figrx8's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 17
Likes: 0
From: ny,ny
Does the transmission work less on highway

The heat issues is so much less on the highway. I had a question for those who know. Does the transmission cooling work more efficient on highway speeds compare to city driving? I drive an AT that heats up a bit much during stop and go traffic.
Reply
Old Jul 4, 2010 | 01:47 PM
  #17  
azzuro's Avatar
So this Rotary thing...?
 
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 424
Likes: 0
From: Sherwood Park, AB
Originally Posted by figrx8
The heat issues is so much less on the highway. I had a question for those who know. Does the transmission cooling work more efficient on highway speeds compare to city driving? I drive an AT that heats up a bit much during stop and go traffic.
On the highway you get a LOT more air flow, so everything stays that much cooler.

Last edited by azzuro; Jul 4, 2010 at 01:48 PM. Reason: Just noticed you revived an old thread
Reply
Old Jul 4, 2010 | 01:56 PM
  #18  
tza0001's Avatar
Dum Spiro Spero
iTrader: (2)
 
Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 862
Likes: 0
From: Outside Philadelphia, PA
Cupholder = coffee warmer))
Reply
Old Jul 4, 2010 | 02:11 PM
  #19  
jasonrxeight's Avatar
Registered
 
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 3,487
Likes: 3
From: Omaha, NE
yep, the prob shaft and transmission tunnel gets warm
Reply
Old Jul 4, 2010 | 02:16 PM
  #20  
Grog's Avatar
Registered User
iTrader: (5)
 
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 442
Likes: 1
From: Bel Air, MD
Originally Posted by nycgps
and dont forget to shield your A/C line. I did it couple weeks ago. getting rdy for the summer baby !
Elaborate? Is this when you line your a/c line with aluminum foil, or something like that? I want to do this but don't know how to start.
Reply
Old Jul 5, 2010 | 02:58 PM
  #21  
CrazyJek's Avatar
"I wanna go fast!"
 
Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 330
Likes: 1
From: East Fishkill NY
Originally Posted by Grog
Elaborate? Is this when you line your a/c line with aluminum foil, or something like that? I want to do this but don't know how to start.
Search "Altspace"

I believe he did it. Under the hood of his car looks like something out of the ScyFy channel. Its gorgeous.
Reply
Old Jul 5, 2010 | 03:18 PM
  #22  
tza0001's Avatar
Dum Spiro Spero
iTrader: (2)
 
Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 862
Likes: 0
From: Outside Philadelphia, PA
Originally Posted by Grog
Elaborate? Is this when you line your a/c line with aluminum foil, or something like that? I want to do this but don't know how to start.
Just wrap up the a/c line that is by the firewall with some heat resistant material. I have seen people using aluminum foil so I assume that this works. However, if you want to feel better about this mod you can go get some material from an autoshop. Home Depot has some heat resistant tape that you can use as well.
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Jesus Martinez
Series I Tech Garage
44
May 6, 2025 08:09 AM
dbarber
Series I Trouble Shooting
14
Jul 25, 2015 01:34 PM
T_Mags
New Member Forum
9
Jul 24, 2015 11:29 AM
Bomba
RX-8 Discussion
0
Jul 22, 2015 06:46 AM
RX7.9
New Member Forum
0
Jul 20, 2015 12:01 PM



You have already rated this thread Rating: Thread Rating: 0 votes,  average.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:05 AM.