This was prompted by reading through (again!) Landtank's monumental fan clutch thread and not finding an answer. That was sparked by listening to our truck at idle as I charged a lawnmower battery up. I have a Scangauge, so get accurate digital water temp readouts. Here's what was happening.
The air temp was around 90 degrees. The truck was idling when I heard the fan kick on with the roar you expect. The water temp at that point was 198 F. This continued for a reasonable amount of time until it cut out at 187 F.
I modded and reinstalled my fan clutch about 3 years ago when I installed a new radiator. I forget what weight silicone fluid I used, but remember not putting a complete fill in, so not sure if there's a full 59 ml in it or not. The truck has generally run cool as necessary, but would prefer to bring water temp down about 5F. It generally runs between 190 and 200 F, but will frequently climb above 200 when the AC is on.
Most of the temps in LT's thread refer to taking it off the truck and placing the clutch in a hot water bath and adjustments between 90 and 125 F. I recall fussing over this, but not what settings I ended up with. This seems to have worked for me in getting the clutch operating generally within the nominal temp range.
My experience a few days ago got me wondering about what you can tell from how the clutch acts when still on the truck? I'm talking about something beyond the "grab it and see if the blade stops" sort of thing. Besides being able to check the performance of a clutch you modify and reinstall as I did, are the kick-in/kick-off set points while mounted in the truck's cooling system useful in analyzing fan clutch performance? What do mine say about whether I'm milking as much cool as possible out of the cooling system or should I consider adding some more silicone goop?
The air temp was around 90 degrees. The truck was idling when I heard the fan kick on with the roar you expect. The water temp at that point was 198 F. This continued for a reasonable amount of time until it cut out at 187 F.
I modded and reinstalled my fan clutch about 3 years ago when I installed a new radiator. I forget what weight silicone fluid I used, but remember not putting a complete fill in, so not sure if there's a full 59 ml in it or not. The truck has generally run cool as necessary, but would prefer to bring water temp down about 5F. It generally runs between 190 and 200 F, but will frequently climb above 200 when the AC is on.
Most of the temps in LT's thread refer to taking it off the truck and placing the clutch in a hot water bath and adjustments between 90 and 125 F. I recall fussing over this, but not what settings I ended up with. This seems to have worked for me in getting the clutch operating generally within the nominal temp range.
My experience a few days ago got me wondering about what you can tell from how the clutch acts when still on the truck? I'm talking about something beyond the "grab it and see if the blade stops" sort of thing. Besides being able to check the performance of a clutch you modify and reinstall as I did, are the kick-in/kick-off set points while mounted in the truck's cooling system useful in analyzing fan clutch performance? What do mine say about whether I'm milking as much cool as possible out of the cooling system or should I consider adding some more silicone goop?