whowouldfigga;1244776 said:
Read this article
"The Myth of the Electric Fan" The author did a good job at covering the positives, negatives, and misconceptions on the electric fan setup. IMHO
My personal opinion on the stock fan setup vs electric fans. "Keep it simple" The electric fan setup can fail in a multitude of ways vs the pulley and belt method. For example. The most common cause of a overheat on a front wheel drive car is what?....Failure of the electric fan motor, the fuse, temp sensor, all related to the electric fan. Mechanical fan failures causing a overheat on rear wheel drive vehicles are few and far between.
And Poodles is right. Your thermostat is toast.
Ignoring that guy's points about the stock harness/stock alternator/stock thermostat getting stressed (car specific, and you should always run new wires to not be dependent on the stock wiring, duh), he only has a few somewhat valid points about electric fans....which I will try to invalidate:
-The fans draw whatever amperage is allowed by the fuse. It is not determined by the horsepower it claims to save, it is determined by the fuse.
-Calling a radiator fan unnecessary, in ANY condition (including at speed) is purely idiotic.
-It is not a drain on the system unless you want to run a huge system along with the fans...that might become a problem :icon_razz
-The failure points he mentions are valid, but just because there are more failure points doesn't automatically means it happens OFTEN. The rate at which an electric fan fails, for whatever reason, is extremely small. Wiring/thermostat can be attributed to the user not using good parts. Fuses blowing is faulty wiring. Physical damage is the same as a mechanical fan.
I still don't see such a big difference.