Is turbo cool down necessary for modern cars?

I've just acquired my first turbo car, a Renault Megane GT Sport and am somewhat unclear about the need for turbo cool down. My manual doesn't mention it and the dealer says its not necessary on modern cars. Am I correct in assuming that the turbo reacts to throttle demand, if so it feels like a 20 to 30 mph drive across town will hardly heat up the turbo enough to require a cool down. Similarly what about a steady motorway cruise at pretty much constant speed. It seems faintly ridiculous to sit with the engine at idle for two minutes after a gentle 10 minute drive at 30mph to the nearest Tesco. I'm really keen to look after my motor. Can you give me some meaningful advice?

Asked on 27 September 2017 by JOHN WILLIAMS

Answered by Honest John
Assuming this is a petrol engine (you didn't say), the turbo is cooled both by engine coolant running through a water jacket and by engine oil running through the turbo bearings. But a turbo can still become extremely hot after racing, after running at constant speed on a motorway, after a long ascent, or after towing and if you switch off immediately the oil in the turbo bearing oil feed and oil return pipes and in the turbo itself can carbonise, contaminating the engine oil and restricting the oil flow through the turbo bearing. So best to let it idle for a minute or two in these circumstances. If the engine has stop/start and it switches off automatically, no need to worry. But if it continues to run, do not switch off. No need to worry about any of this after short, suburban journeys. The turbo won't get too hot.
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