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Thread: I think I just found my overheating problem .........
          
   
   

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  1. #1
    Old Coyote's Avatar
    Old Coyote is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    I think I just found my overheating problem .........

     



    .... and I don't believe it has anything to do with our little off-road excursion ........ I headed down to the weekly Thursday night cruise-in ........ stopped and got a tank of gas ........ temp at 195, but that would be normal after being turned off at the pumps ........ headed back out for the gathering and the temp continued to climb ........ reached nearly 230 before I could get some clean running back to the house ........ was at 205 when I got home ........ shut hm off and unfastened the nose and tilted it down ........ no coolant leaking this time, but when I turned on the ignition to check the fan ......... nothing, nada, nyet, zip, zilch ........ the fan is thermostatically controlled to come on at 180*, and that's not happening

    Hope it's just the sensor and not the fan itself ........ I have a spare toggle switch on the dash and I'm really thinking about direct wiring the fan to that switch (if the fan is indeed ok) ......... I'm getting a little tired of all this fancy stuff going out ......... we'll check it again in the morning, but I think that's my problem ...... intermittant fan

  2. #2
    cffisher's Avatar
    cffisher is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Technoloegy strikes again
    Charlie
    Lovin' what I do and doing what I love
    Some guys can fix broken NO ONE can fix STUPID
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  3. #3
    jerry clayton's Avatar
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    John---do you have teflon tape on the threads of your temp sensor for the fan???? It will insulate the threads and not let the current go to ground

    Jerry

  4. #4
    rspears's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jerry clayton View Post
    John---do you have teflon tape on the threads of your temp sensor for the fan???? It will insulate the threads and not let the current go to ground

    Jerry
    Amen to that, Jerry. That was the first question the AutoMeter guy asked me when I called about a faulty gauge, and he said that about 95% of their temp sender problems are teflon tape insulation.
    Roger
    Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.

  5. #5
    jerry clayton's Avatar
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    AutoMeter is in Sycamore Il about 15 miles west of here---I may have been who told them that!!!

  6. #6
    Whiplash23T's Avatar
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    The electric fan on the radiator of the Bucket is wired through a toggle switch only and out on the highway I don't need it but once in city traffic,it is only a matter of flicking the switch for it to suck more air through the radiator. It works good for me.
    I maybe a little crazy but it stops me going insane.

    Isaiah 48: 17,18.

    Mark.

  7. #7
    rspears's Avatar
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    I use SPAL's Programmable Controller for mine with a SPAL sender, and I like the ability to easily program the staged "ON" temps for the low/hi speeds. Mine is set for low speed "ON" at 203, with high speed coming in at 215F. I normally run down the open road at 186 to 192F, with occasional excursions to 203. My fan normally does not run on the highway.
    Roger
    Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.

  8. #8
    Mike P's Avatar
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    I think your thoughs about wiring the toggle is a good one. Back when I was running electric fans, I used a thermostat switch but also had the fan wired to a switch on the dash and it came in useful more than once.
    I've NEVER seen a car come from the factory that couldn't be improved.....

  9. #9
    Itoldyouso's Avatar
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    I never have trusted the controllers to turn on my fans, so I wire them with a toggle switch that I control. I rarely forget to turn it on and am more reliable that any controller we have bought. Dan has a SPAL controller on his rpu and we had to call SPAL because it wasn't coming on, they told us to put juice into the green wire which effectively keeps it running all the time at 100%. It is coming out when we put his engine back in and a toggle switch is going in it's place.

    Don

  10. #10
    Old Coyote's Avatar
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    No Jerry, no teflon tape on the sensor ........... I just think the sensor is going bad

  11. #11
    rumrumm's Avatar
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    I use Centech's fan control box--very slick way to control your electric fan. No problems in five years of use.


    Lynn
    '32 3W

    There's no 12 step program for stupid!

    http://photo.net/photos/Lynn%20Johanson

  12. #12
    cffisher's Avatar
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    you can wire it so the thermostate turns it on and put in a switch to over ride. Guess you'll just have to watch the temp gauge
    Charlie
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  13. #13
    hawk56 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Why not wire it to run when ever the motor is running ? After all a mechanical fan does that .
    Or are we saving electric ? LOL

  14. #14
    Dq383500's Avatar
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    I did the on all the time thing, and went thru 3 fan motors in 5 years, mind you at the time I was doing a lot of long distance high speed commuting, and at speed I could hear the fan just screaming. I think being on like that just gave it a boost, although the motors were cheap A/Z motors. I probably should have just put a on/off switch.

  15. #15
    sunsetdart is offline Banned Visit my Photo Gallery
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    There is never a need to have the fan come on with a turn of the key, especially when the motor is cold. You don't need to cool a cold motor.
    I had a thermostat control on one time, and I also had a toggle to over ride the switch. After the thermostat control took a crap, I just removed it and just had the toggle to turn the fan on only when I needed it.

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