Don't know how you had them switched, but at highway speed it shouldn't make much difference between the two types, even when towing.
Mine has had one fan going all the time for 60k km and the second fan only comes on when the gauge gets to about 1/3. It will not go over 1/2 in Melb at multiple red traffic lights on a 35+C day with the 350 boat anchor idling away.
Maybe the electronic interference from Maccas drive thru in Colac was affecting yours??![]()
You're welcome to see how I've done this, I go through Colac a bit.
cheers, DL
Dougal and Mr Whippy I think understand what I was on about, I am not critisizing a fan from any particular manufacturer but I am if you are fitting an unsuitable fan to a vehicle then complaning it does not do the job, if a suitable fan is fitted properly and the cooling system is in good condition then electric fans in most situations will do the job.
Its more so that fans dont like being dumped in water and loaded up when running as the amp draw tends to rise rather fast and the fuses blow.Electric fans aren't going to eat the radiator anyway. No need for a lockout switch IMO.
Water wont generally tend to be a problem getting sprayed around as it takes very little to stop them even when they are running flat out.
I dont have a lockout on mine, just a manual on and I just unplug a wire from the switch on the thermo housing to stop them when needed.
Have a look here http://www.pacet.co.uk/
Critical thing with fans is you want one that "pulls" not push, and look at the airflow figures. Anyone that doesn't state a figure through at least a 30mm core thickness, fans will be inadequate.
Was under the bonnet of SWMBO's '99 Lancer the other day poking around and taking some skin off my knuckles. The fans in these have an exceptional amount of flow, the A/C one in particular which is smaller, but has a far deeper pitch on the blade than the main fan and pulls significantly more air.
A lot of late model 4 & 6cyl passenger fans are more than adequate for the job, it just comes down to fitment and how many. The Lancer ones for example are separate from the shroud, but they mount to the shroud at the fan body, which then makes it hard to fit to any other shroud.
I couldnt source Pacet here but Factory Air were a supplier of mine so I scammed a good deal an made my own including the shroud.
Cheers
Andrew
At highway speed, you don't need a fan at all.Years ago a mate of mine unbolted all the fan blades from his Peugeot 403 and left them off for a year or so. It got a bit warm when he went to visit his girlfriend in Sydney, but on the open road, it ran at exactly the same temperature as when the blades were on.
IIRC, his fuel economy improved by almost 2 miles per gallon.
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
I wonder why no-one has developed an electrical clutch thingy like you get on your air conditioner, hooked up to a thermostat, for the main (engine driven) fan?
Seems like a reasonable idea to me. zero power drain when you don't need it. Full power once over 'x' degrees C. Can lock it out when doing water crossings......
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