Show me your manual electric cooling fan setup

LtFuzz

Explorer
I agree completely. A manual only fan setup would be silliness. Having an Off/Auto/On switch would be the best setup.

I don't think it'd be silliness for my application.

I have a 180F thermostat, operating temperature is at/around 190F. It's a diesel so temp fluctuations are normal and frequent vis a vis ambient temp and/or hills.

Having the fan on 100% of the time after normal operating temp is reached isn't unreasonable. The more I think about it, I wouldn't be turning it on/off as often as I thought. It would mostly be on -- and at <22 amps that isn't a big problem. It certainly wouldn't suck more power than having a direct-drive fan (no clutch) spinning 100% of the time anyway, which is what I currently have (had.)

I think that might be the way to go. Remember I'm running a 6.2L NA diesel, not the Rover V8.
 

lwg

Member
Interesting -- how did you do this? Did you fish it through the original coolant temp sensor port and stack the temp sensor in front/behind it?

Or did you cut a hole into the hose and reseal? Wouldn't there be issues with expansion/contraction of the hose?

We used this:

http://www.jegs.com/webapp/wcs/stor...nar=0&Ne=1+2+3+13+1147708&searchTerm=105-2283

And this:

http://www.jegs.com/webapp/wcs/stor...ar=0&Ne=1+2+3+13+1147708&searchTerm=259-16731

Also regarding the fans, I don't recall for certain but I seem to recall that Flex-a-Lite has some really compact dual fan setups. I think that's what I used several years ago for my setup back then. I want to say they were about 2500 CFM but again I'm going off of memory.
 

LtFuzz

Explorer
Also regarding the fans, I don't recall for certain but I seem to recall that Flex-a-Lite has some really compact dual fan setups. I think that's what I used several years ago for my setup back then. I want to say they were about 2500 CFM but again I'm going off of memory.

Yep, same as in my original post -- the Flex-a-Lite Super Low Profile dual fans. They are indeed listed at 2500cfm.

Thanks for the JEGS links -- that's also where I ordered my fan setup from.
 
I don't think it'd be silliness for my application.

I have a 180F thermostat, operating temperature is at/around 190F. It's a diesel so temp fluctuations are normal and frequent vis a vis ambient temp and/or hills.

Having the fan on 100% of the time after normal operating temp is reached isn't unreasonable. The more I think about it, I wouldn't be turning it on/off as often as I thought. It would mostly be on -- and at <22 amps that isn't a big problem. It certainly wouldn't suck more power than having a direct-drive fan (no clutch) spinning 100% of the time anyway, which is what I currently have (had.)

I think that might be the way to go. Remember I'm running a 6.2L NA diesel, not the Rover V8.

Why would you want to draw 22A from the alternator when you don't need to? Seems like needless wear on the Alternator, and I don't think the Flexalite is intended for that either.

No to mention, my Flexalite fans are INCREDIBLY loud. My car is already really loud (yeah, about as loud as a diesel, with a bad exhaust leak) and when the fans kick on, women and children run for cover.
 

LtFuzz

Explorer
Why would you want to draw 22A from the alternator when you don't need to? Seems like needless wear on the Alternator, and I don't think the Flexalite is intended for that either.

The point is a giant NA diesel like the 6.2 is going to need constant cooling, for the most part. If it's a cool/cold day, or I'm taking a long descent down a slope, I can turn it off, but the fan is going to spend most of its time on no matter what -- clutch fan, electric, whatever -- because the motor generates a lot of heat. 190-195F at idle is pretty normal -- and with 210F being the recommended upper limit you can see what I mean.

The wear on components is going to occur somewhere. The 6.2 draws about 3 amps or so when running with no other systems on, and I'll be upgrading to a 150 amp alternator as part of this build. 14-22 amps for the fan isn't exactly taxing the alternator. I think it would be more taxing for an alternator to constantly spin up and spin down when it's trying to correct a 3-5 degree F temperature difference. No point having a VSC switch on-off-on-off-on-off-on-off when I can just leave it on.

No to mention, my Flexalite fans are INCREDIBLY loud. My car is already really loud (yeah, about as loud as a diesel, with a bad exhaust leak) and when the fans kick on, women and children run for cover.

You should hear my motor. With the 3" pipe it's not quite as loud as a FedEx truck Cummins, but it's pretty close. I doubt the fans will make much of a difference -- either way I have no choice, this is the only electric fan platform that will fit my application.

Don't get me wrong -- I'm not throwing out the other options, I particularly like the links LWG posted. But a simple on/off switch is definitely a potential approach.
 
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