- Joined
- February 9, 1999
- Messages
- 11,923
- Reaction score
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- City, State
- Vail, Arizona
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1992 XLT 4x4
There has been some good interest in Electric Fan recently and while installing this latest electric fan I noticed that there are a few different schools of thought of where to put the sensor and what temp to run the e-fan.
Some people run the sensor in the intake (Engine coolant temp) and they seem to turn the fan on 15 degrees above the the thermostat temp.
Others run the sensor in the radiator with the probe near the radiator inlet.
The 3rd group I see is people who run the sensor in the radiator but with the probe near the outlet (coolest water)
I'm looking less for the "type" of controller people are using and more towards Where is the sensor and at what temp is it running full speed and at what temp will it turn off the e-fan. Also, What temp is the thermostat and what temps is the vehicle running. Is this the final configuration and are there any issues. Possibly even "why" you went that way.
For example, We just installed an e-fan (taurus) on the tow rig (full size ford van with a 460 motor)...
Thermostat: 195F
Probe Location: Engine
Fan on temp: 205F ish
Fan off temp: 194F ish
Issues: Freeway driving temp (at 65mph) is 203-ish which means if the fan is on when I get on the freeway it doesn't turn off. In order for the fan to turn off when on the freeway I'd have to raise the turn on temp to 210F or so. I've seen this configuration on some rigs but 210F for a fan turn on temp "feels" outside my confort zone. I know some people that run the turn on at 215 of "engine temp" but that is definitely outside my comfort zone.
I'm thinking (close to doing) that I want the fan to control the radiator temp only (turn on/off lower) and let the thermostat alone control the engine temp. This means putting the probe in the radiator and I'm leaning more towards the outlet. This, in theory, will allow the motor to run cooler since I won't need to let it get as hot before turning on the fan and still allow it to turn off when on the freeway.
~Mark
Some people run the sensor in the intake (Engine coolant temp) and they seem to turn the fan on 15 degrees above the the thermostat temp.
Others run the sensor in the radiator with the probe near the radiator inlet.
The 3rd group I see is people who run the sensor in the radiator but with the probe near the outlet (coolest water)
I'm looking less for the "type" of controller people are using and more towards Where is the sensor and at what temp is it running full speed and at what temp will it turn off the e-fan. Also, What temp is the thermostat and what temps is the vehicle running. Is this the final configuration and are there any issues. Possibly even "why" you went that way.
For example, We just installed an e-fan (taurus) on the tow rig (full size ford van with a 460 motor)...
Thermostat: 195F
Probe Location: Engine
Fan on temp: 205F ish
Fan off temp: 194F ish
Issues: Freeway driving temp (at 65mph) is 203-ish which means if the fan is on when I get on the freeway it doesn't turn off. In order for the fan to turn off when on the freeway I'd have to raise the turn on temp to 210F or so. I've seen this configuration on some rigs but 210F for a fan turn on temp "feels" outside my confort zone. I know some people that run the turn on at 215 of "engine temp" but that is definitely outside my comfort zone.
I'm thinking (close to doing) that I want the fan to control the radiator temp only (turn on/off lower) and let the thermostat alone control the engine temp. This means putting the probe in the radiator and I'm leaning more towards the outlet. This, in theory, will allow the motor to run cooler since I won't need to let it get as hot before turning on the fan and still allow it to turn off when on the freeway.
~Mark