I asked my friend who is an electronics teacher what he had to say about electric fans vs mechanical, since many debate that no power is gained due to the extra load the fans place on the alternator. He replied:
"In my (never humble) opinion at mid to higher RPM's electric is more efficient than mechanical for automotive engines also at low RPM's electric can do more work than mechanical for automotive engines
Other advantages
- less inertia with electrical thus the engine can rev up and down more quickly
- less parasitic load because electrical only draws what it needs to accomplish the work at the time the work is needed, whereas mechanical may draw a larger load on a more constant basis regardless of actual demand
- electrical can supply all the needed work at low RPM's however if RPM's are too low for mechanical, it may not be able to accomplish the needed work
I will say however that some of the above advantages may be more academic then actual, because there are other overriding conditions that moderate the differences such as cost, reliability, weight, drive-train inertia, actual work needed, etc. Also some of the above advantages are application specific, thus a generalization would not be an easy claim to support!"
I think he may have some good points IF there only was a better designed fan control module availabe. I have dual fans and can only find controllers that will turn them on or off at a set temperature. If I had a single fan, they make dual speed controllers with a low and high speed setting which makes more sense, espesically in winter, when the low speed would probably be sufficient most of the time. Ideally, a controller should control both of my fans and have a variable speed to maintain the set temp, but no such thing exists that I can find. Any idea why? I think they use PWM’s to controller the speed, does this limit the variable speed possibility? Currently, my fans will remain off until the set temp is reached, then they stay on all the time.
I'm interested to hear your opinions on this, and to see if anyone at least knows where I can get a dual-fan, dual-speed controller?
"In my (never humble) opinion at mid to higher RPM's electric is more efficient than mechanical for automotive engines also at low RPM's electric can do more work than mechanical for automotive engines
Other advantages
- less inertia with electrical thus the engine can rev up and down more quickly
- less parasitic load because electrical only draws what it needs to accomplish the work at the time the work is needed, whereas mechanical may draw a larger load on a more constant basis regardless of actual demand
- electrical can supply all the needed work at low RPM's however if RPM's are too low for mechanical, it may not be able to accomplish the needed work
I will say however that some of the above advantages may be more academic then actual, because there are other overriding conditions that moderate the differences such as cost, reliability, weight, drive-train inertia, actual work needed, etc. Also some of the above advantages are application specific, thus a generalization would not be an easy claim to support!"
I think he may have some good points IF there only was a better designed fan control module availabe. I have dual fans and can only find controllers that will turn them on or off at a set temperature. If I had a single fan, they make dual speed controllers with a low and high speed setting which makes more sense, espesically in winter, when the low speed would probably be sufficient most of the time. Ideally, a controller should control both of my fans and have a variable speed to maintain the set temp, but no such thing exists that I can find. Any idea why? I think they use PWM’s to controller the speed, does this limit the variable speed possibility? Currently, my fans will remain off until the set temp is reached, then they stay on all the time.
I'm interested to hear your opinions on this, and to see if anyone at least knows where I can get a dual-fan, dual-speed controller?