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“Turn off the air conditioner and switch to the fan one to two minutes before parking to dry the system.”
For car‑obsessed fathers in their 50s and 60s, that rule reads like gospel. The logic: running the A/C creates condensation inside, and drying it prevents mold and a musty smell.
Many also insist on idling for 30 seconds before shutting off the engine to protect it. But with 2026’s modern cars, those long‑held habits only tell part of the story.
Turn off the A/C — your car may run the fan for 10 minutes to dry the system
The basic idea—that drying A/C moisture prevents mold—is sound. The key change is that you don’t necessarily have to stand there and do it yourself anymore.

Hyundai Motor Group began rolling out an “After‑Blow” system years ago: when you shut off the engine, the blower fan automatically runs for a set time to dry the air‑conditioning system.
You’ll find this capability in the latest Hyundai and Kia owner manuals under names like “Auto Dry” or “A/C automatic drying.”
If the feature is enabled, the vehicle will, roughly 30 minutes after you turn the engine off, activate the blower for about 10 minutes to evaporate remaining moisture from the evaporator.
Put simply, software and climate‑control systems now handle maintenance drivers used to do manually. Start by checking your car’s settings to see if the function is available.
Idling 30 seconds before shutdown? Generally only after high‑load turbo driving

The belief that you must always idle for at least 30 seconds before turning off the engine to protect it is largely overstated for modern cars.
For typical naturally aspirated cars or vehicles that have only done ordinary city driving, turning the engine off right after parking won’t harm the engine. Needless idling simply wastes fuel and increases emissions.
Manufacturers generally recommend waiting before shutdown only for turbocharged vehicles that have just completed high‑load driving—long highway runs, steep climbs or otherwise severe operation.
Manuals from Kia, Toyota and other makers of turbo cars advise a short idle—about a minute—after heavy use so the turbine can cool before you switch the engine off. In other words, you don’t need to stand around for 30 seconds after a routine grocery trip or commute.

The older generation’s advice isn’t wrong. It’s just that many of the manual practices they followed have been automated by advanced features in modern cars.
Instead of clinging to rules from two decades ago, pull the owner’s manual from your glove compartment — it’s the best way to learn how to care for your car.











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