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Stealer Of Souls wrote:If you put the switch on the bottom I would think it would turn on too late... The water coming out the bottom would be too hot and THEN the fans would switch on. You'd potentially end up with a large slug of water that is too hot getting sent back in for further heating...
strx7 wrote:Stealer Of Souls wrote:If you put the switch on the bottom I would think it would turn on too late... The water coming out the bottom would be too hot and THEN the fans would switch on. You'd potentially end up with a large slug of water that is too hot getting sent back in for further heating...
If you used a temp dependant switch and were placing it after the radiator you'd just use a cooler switching sensor, somewhere about 75-80 degrees would be in the ball park, application dependant.
The beauty with using an aftermarket ecu is you can switch things at whatever
matt dunn wrote:Your thermostat will be low eighties temp wise,
and rad fan switches are mid nineties.
In therory the thermostat should be wide open and the water should be flowing arond the whole system flat out all at the same temp at the point the fans switch on.
If it's at the bottom of the radiator, the water in the radiator will cool pretty quick and the fan will not say on long,
but not much will have been cooled either, so it will cycle on of quite fast.
If you run it in the top hose it will keep running until the water coming out of the engine has cooled, so it will stay on longer, and also switch of for longer.
Py7h0n wrote:Trust me - JZ with electric fans is going to require them on most of the time once the temp gets up to normal.
Once mine are on, thats is, until I turn the engine off. Mine are configured to turn on >93 and off <90.
Quint wrote:Necro!
MrOizo, I'm in the same situation atm, Where did you decide to put the switch in the end? and what did you use as your switching temp (on and off).
allencr wrote:The fan is there to cool the rad. when there is inadequate air flow through it and the coolant going into the engine isn't getting cooled down enough. That is why ANY factory setup you can find has the fan sensor on the rad. outlet/engine inlet side.
Using the engine outlet temp to control the fan, from the same location as your temp. gauge, will turn the fan on almost all the time whenever the engine is under a load & running hard. Even during Winter at +100kph.
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