Is he planning to running the car with the garage door closed?
Yes, that is the plan. The goal is:
1. It's a cold day
2. Car is parked in unheated garage (with door closed)
3. Press remote-start to warm it up
The ideal situation would be to
not have to pay to have the garage heated.
And not die from fumes. It doesn't appear that there is an easy, off-the-shelf solution for car exhaust ventilation in an enclosed garage, however. According to the link below, it is not safe to warm up a car in a garage, even with the door opened:
http://www.abe.iastate.edu/extension-and-outreach/carbon-monoxide-poisoning-garages-aen-207/
Is it safe to briefly warm up a car in an open garage?
No. In an Iowa State study, warming up a vehicle for only two minutes with the overhead door open raised CO concentrations in the garage to 500 ppm. Ten hours after the car had been backed out of the garage, there was still a measurable concentration of CO in the garage. Persons working in the garage for a long period of time would breath a dangerous amount of carbon monoxide.
There are a variety of options:
1. Pull the car out of the garage & then remote-start to warm it up
2. Get a firehouse-style exhaust pipe (requires manual attachment, which is kind of ridiculous to do every day)
3. Insulate the garage (insulated garage door & room insulation) to keep temperatures somewhat stable (especially if the garage is attached to the house & can mooch some warmth)
4. Install a heater (possibly on a timer) to keep the garage (and thus the car) warm
5. Ignore the safety issues & start it up in a closed garage
6. Ignore the safety issues & start it up in the garage with the door open
7. Install a commercial air exchange system (ex. with a
big fan) like dyno shops have (and somehow tie it into the remote-start system to kick it off automatically, or remember to start it up manually when you remote start the car - both of which are a hassle because you need to custom-develop a link system, or always remember to hit a switch to start the ventilation system)
It's a simple problem with a complex solution. Yes, it is a convenience project & yes, it isn't terribly important in the grand scheme of things. Definitely a first-world problem. But I'd still like to know exactly what the situation is. It seems like a pretty simple request - keep the car parked out of the elements, press a button in the morning to start it up so that it's warm when I hop in.