Cruiserdrew said:
...So, new clutch, drain out the new 3000 cst oil, add 2 tubes of 6000 cst oil, and call it good? I may do the adjustment for grins, but I have a ton of other projects, so if avoidable, I'm avoiding it!
I guess the real question is how important is the fan clutch timing adjustment?
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The fluids are mixable and the resulting viscosity is determined by the percentages of the fluids. On a new clutch I wouldn't waste all of the new fluid and take the time to clean it all out. Just remove about 15 ml and add a tube of 10,000 cst will net about 5000 cst, or if your want thicker, remove about 30 ml and add two tubes for about 7000 cst.
I cleaned mine and added ~55 ml of a non Toyota 10,000 cst fluid, it appeared to about the same level as the factory fill, but it's hard to tell. Rick has run them with two tubes (36 ml), they operate correctly, some have run them with four tubes (72 ml) and still had the valve work correctly. So the fill doesn't look to be that critical as long as it's not overfilled so the reservoir overflows causing it to stay on all of the time. I prefer more fluid so the circulation time is longer, may cool the fluid better extending it's life, no data, just my thought.
I see fan output air temps of ~110-125F at speed and 150-165F when stopped. Shift neutral on the highway and rev it I hear little or no fan noise, stop at a light, it heat soaks due to the loss of ram airflow, the fan output air temp raises but the other temps now stay stable. Accelerate from the light, there is big fan noise, the fan output air temp drops quickly and with a few blocks the fan noise goes away. IMHO the fan is doing a good job of reacting to heat loads, providing much improved airflow and keeping temps stable with the stock valve setting.
With the stock thinner fluid, advancing the valve gets more fluid into play sooner, but even full open it doesn't pump enough air when the truck is pushed hard. With the thicker fluid MUCH more air is pumped, so advancing it is less or may not necessary. I am thinking about 115F or so would allow the fan to freewheel when low load highway cruising and still react quickly to loads.
Two data points I would like to see are; What temp is the valve fully open at and what is the fan output air temp with the truck at speed and the coolant at 200F+? It maybe better to go at valve adjustment from that end, making sure that the valve is fully open in an extreme heat load?