Fan of a fan
#1
Fan of a fan
I recently built a 4 bolt main 6.6 liter small block with dual quads. In order to keep it at 180-190 degrees, I installed a four row radiator and a 16" stainless steel flex fan. As a backup, I have a 16" electric fan in front of it as a puller. Looking at the clutch fan on my 84, I wondered if I could keep the engine a little cooler by installing a similar direct drive flex fan. Has anyone done this and if so, who is the vendor of choice?
#6
#7
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Joined: Aug 2004
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From: Rep of Texas, N NM, Rockies, SoCal
Reverse the flow direction of the front fan so it is not a puller but a pusher(going from front to rear), also so it is not pushing opposite the direction of travel.
I've no experience with the early fan clutch setup.
I've no experience with the early fan clutch setup.
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#8
TEMP RANGE
overheating as the stat is new and the engine is not exceptionally hot after a ride. The gauge is at the high-middle mark when it previously was just high of middle overall. Could be the sender, but I tend to like my engines running cooler, rather than hotter like modern engines do.
#9
HOW
Exactly which fan re you talking about and how would you proppse to reverse the flow without reversing the rotation?
#11
Its not
overheating as the stat is new and the engine is not exceptionally hot after a ride. The gauge is at the high-middle mark when it previously was just high of middle overall. Could be the sender, but I tend to like my engines running cooler, rather than hotter like modern engines do.
You believe cooler is better for...what reason?
Temperatures are important to many things. Best left to those that designed them.
Why make it complicated?
#12
BTW...I have a 406 with a stock radiator and two small electric fans in an off-topic vehicle with AFR heads with drilled steam holes and no overheating problems whatsoever with the air condition on sitting in traffic
#13
Is the 6.6L in a 928 and getting hot?....anyway a 6.6l is most likely a siameased bore 400...if so do the heads have steam holes? Aftermarket heads need them drilled and OE heads need them cleaned out. Also make sure you timing is right. These are the two most common reasons why for hundreds get hot.
BTW...I have a 406 with a stock radiator and two small electric fans in an off-topic vehicle with AFR heads with drilled steam holes and no overheating problems whatsoever with the air condition on sitting in traffic
BTW...I have a 406 with a stock radiator and two small electric fans in an off-topic vehicle with AFR heads with drilled steam holes and no overheating problems whatsoever with the air condition on sitting in traffic
High revs and ambient temps dont mean anything to an engine? Thanks for that pearl. I will keep it in mind.
You believe riding mine is appropriate, what reason?
Second statement sound like something said in Helsinki.....Who designed temperatures, may I ask?
Nothing complicated about anticipating something like getting caught in summer traffic jam (we all dont live on the open plains) and wanting a "thermal safety factor"..
#14
Stock US 16V's engine don't go past 6,000rpm (don't make any additional power much past 5,500). These bottom ends are capable of much, much more. Point is, these engines are so over developed and under powered, a bone stock unit is not going to benefit from running a bit cooler, especially on the street.
The idea of running an engine cooler to make more power absolutely has merit, but you are not going to see such gains with a bone stock US 16V car. You also have to remember these are fuel injected, which means there is a temp sensor dictating the fuel usage. If you run the engine cold enough to fall into a richer area of that sensor, your car will never run with proper air / fuels unless you adjust things.
The cooling system on these cars is very, very efficient and oversized. No need to reinvent the wheel unless you are also planning some other big modifications to increase power. The stock belt driven fan is just as capable of keeping temps under control as the later electric fans and the cooling system is the same capacity as later cars making 100+ more HP.
Do what you want, doesn't really matter to us. Most of us respond to such threads for the benefit of others following along at home who see such threads and start to ponder if they too should be trying to increase the cooling efficiency of their cars.
If a slow moving car is overheating, the fan is failing, the radiator is clogged, impeller on the pump loose etc......something is preventing or not moving enough air through the radiator or coolant flow compromised.
Fix the problem and you'll be fine. A stock 16V US 928 sitting in the Sahara Desert will not overheat at idle if all systems are working as the factory intended.
The idea of running an engine cooler to make more power absolutely has merit, but you are not going to see such gains with a bone stock US 16V car. You also have to remember these are fuel injected, which means there is a temp sensor dictating the fuel usage. If you run the engine cold enough to fall into a richer area of that sensor, your car will never run with proper air / fuels unless you adjust things.
The cooling system on these cars is very, very efficient and oversized. No need to reinvent the wheel unless you are also planning some other big modifications to increase power. The stock belt driven fan is just as capable of keeping temps under control as the later electric fans and the cooling system is the same capacity as later cars making 100+ more HP.
Do what you want, doesn't really matter to us. Most of us respond to such threads for the benefit of others following along at home who see such threads and start to ponder if they too should be trying to increase the cooling efficiency of their cars.
Fix the problem and you'll be fine. A stock 16V US 928 sitting in the Sahara Desert will not overheat at idle if all systems are working as the factory intended.
#15
I agree with the idea of a thermal safety factor, and a better fan may give you that. The thermostat may prevent that from showing up as lower operating temperature. The better fan may just keep temperature in range on hotter days. By the way there is a cooler thermostat available that will lower your temperature but many here have advised against it.
Good luck,
Dave
Good luck,
Dave