S4 with wide radiator - OK to drop engine mounted fan?
11 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Good morning/afternoon gentlemen. With lots and lots of your help I’m getting to the details on reinstalling the engine and cooling system on my 1969 USA Federal car.
As a reminder this car has been partially disassembled since 1991 and the original radiator was beyond cost effective repair, so I purchased a heavy duty wide triumph Spitfire radiator. I’m bringing that to get the neck reoriented to the proper direction, but wanted to ask if you think I can skip using a plastic engine mounted cooling fan . I would run the pressure fan in front of the radiator of course, but was hoping to get some thoughts and coaching from you on this.
I live in Southern California, and it can be warm down here but for the most part this will be a pretty mild weather car and I generally plan my days/routes to avoid rush-hour traffic.
Thank you in advance for the thoughts.
As a reminder this car has been partially disassembled since 1991 and the original radiator was beyond cost effective repair, so I purchased a heavy duty wide triumph Spitfire radiator. I’m bringing that to get the neck reoriented to the proper direction, but wanted to ask if you think I can skip using a plastic engine mounted cooling fan . I would run the pressure fan in front of the radiator of course, but was hoping to get some thoughts and coaching from you on this.
I live in Southern California, and it can be warm down here but for the most part this will be a pretty mild weather car and I generally plan my days/routes to avoid rush-hour traffic.
Thank you in advance for the thoughts.
SoCal
1969 Elan DHC
1969 Elan DHC
- tdskip
- Third Gear
- Posts: 428
- Joined: 13 Sep 2012
tdskip wrote:............but wanted to ask if you think I can skip using a plastic engine mounted cooling fan . I would run the pressure fan in front of the radiator of course, but was hoping to get some thoughts and coaching from you on this.
I don't think later cars ever came from the factory with "mechanical fans" attached to the water pump pulley, I think this was an American distributor or dealer mod when owners had cooling issues. There may be a service bulletin on it.
You should be OK with cooling system in good condition & just your functioning electric fan.I would still make sure there are no gaps around the radiator, so air has to go through it, rather than around it.
Phil Harrison
1972 Elan Sprint 0260K
1972 Elan Sprint 0260K
-
pharriso - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 3186
- Joined: 15 Sep 2010
If efficiency and peace of mind is of the essence, I would source an electrical pusher fan (used if need be) and install that (possibly even remove the mechanical one then)... minimal installation could even be manual switched operation initially.
S4SE 36/8198
-
nmauduit - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1998
- Joined: 02 Sep 2013
Hi Folks (Long time since I last posted)
A decent full width Spitfire radiator will do the job. I have an original S3 Radiator with a dense core 71C/160F thermostat and my Sprint runs cool in 30C heat and fast driving. The only time the temp rises is in slow traffic and when stopped,
I have twin rear mounted electric fans which cool the engine very quickly. The fans are top quality ones which are thinner but can still flow large volumes of air. They will however draw about 8amps each so might want to install a relay.
A rear mounted fan is best location for unrestricted air flow (and the physics of cooling means air pulled through cools better than air pushed through). A front fan can still do the job if that's the only option
As previously mentioned avoid putting a single fan central on a radiator as it fouls either the bonnet spring or the engine pulley. Plenty of space to one side.
If getting your radiator modified think about getting a boss installed to take a fan switch similar to original ottor switch or threaded (M22x 1.5mm is a very common thread) this makes it easy to trigger your electric fan.
I have the bonnet foam that seals on top of radiator but don't use anything at the bottom as my rad sits low. I did make some custom radiator brackets that allowed more movement for better positioning and engine clearance.
For anyone fitting a wide radiator to later models (mine included) you may need to fettle the bodywork underneath but its a very simple quick job.
Clive
A decent full width Spitfire radiator will do the job. I have an original S3 Radiator with a dense core 71C/160F thermostat and my Sprint runs cool in 30C heat and fast driving. The only time the temp rises is in slow traffic and when stopped,
I have twin rear mounted electric fans which cool the engine very quickly. The fans are top quality ones which are thinner but can still flow large volumes of air. They will however draw about 8amps each so might want to install a relay.
A rear mounted fan is best location for unrestricted air flow (and the physics of cooling means air pulled through cools better than air pushed through). A front fan can still do the job if that's the only option
As previously mentioned avoid putting a single fan central on a radiator as it fouls either the bonnet spring or the engine pulley. Plenty of space to one side.
If getting your radiator modified think about getting a boss installed to take a fan switch similar to original ottor switch or threaded (M22x 1.5mm is a very common thread) this makes it easy to trigger your electric fan.
I have the bonnet foam that seals on top of radiator but don't use anything at the bottom as my rad sits low. I did make some custom radiator brackets that allowed more movement for better positioning and engine clearance.
For anyone fitting a wide radiator to later models (mine included) you may need to fettle the bodywork underneath but its a very simple quick job.
Clive
1972 Elan Sprint FHC
- cliveyboy
- Fourth Gear
- Posts: 595
- Joined: 22 Sep 2003
Engine mounted fans on most cars are pretty hopeless. You really need it when the car isn't moving to shift air through the rad, and that is usually when the car is ticking over and fan speed is low. When the car is moving, the fan is generally surplus to requirements, yet that is when it moves most air and sucks up most HP.
Viscous couplings are one way to go, my old Landrover has a fan the size of a helicopter, and a great big viscous hub. I guess they plan for mud-plugging, when forward speed is low, but in low-range the engine revs (and cooling requirement) would be quite high.
I would put the engine mounted fan in the bin, and fit one (or maybe two if cooling is marginal) electric fans. As the rad is rectangular, two electric fans fit nicely side by side.
Viscous couplings are one way to go, my old Landrover has a fan the size of a helicopter, and a great big viscous hub. I guess they plan for mud-plugging, when forward speed is low, but in low-range the engine revs (and cooling requirement) would be quite high.
I would put the engine mounted fan in the bin, and fit one (or maybe two if cooling is marginal) electric fans. As the rad is rectangular, two electric fans fit nicely side by side.
68 Elan S3 HSCC Roadsports spec
71 Elan Sprint (still being restored)
32 Standard 12
Various modern stuff
71 Elan Sprint (still being restored)
32 Standard 12
Various modern stuff
- Andy8421
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1223
- Joined: 27 Mar 2011
cliveyboy wrote:Hi Folks (Long time since I last posted)
A decent full width Spitfire radiator will do the job. I have an original S3 Radiator with a dense core 71C/160F thermostat and my Sprint runs cool in 30C heat and fast driving. The only time the temp rises is in slow traffic and when stopped,
I have twin rear mounted electric fans which cool the engine very quickly. The fans are top quality ones which are thinner but can still flow large volumes of air. They will however draw about 8amps each so might want to install a relay.
A rear mounted fan is best location for unrestricted air flow (and the physics of cooling means air pulled through cools better than air pushed through). A front fan can still do the job if that's the only option
As previously mentioned avoid putting a single fan central on a radiator as it fouls either the bonnet spring or the engine pulley. Plenty of space to one side.
If getting your radiator modified think about getting a boss installed to take a fan switch similar to original ottor switch or threaded (M22x 1.5mm is a very common thread) this makes it easy to trigger your electric fan.
I have the bonnet foam that seals on top of radiator but don't use anything at the bottom as my rad sits low. I did make some custom radiator brackets that allowed more movement for better positioning and engine clearance.
For anyone fitting a wide radiator to later models (mine included) you may need to fettle the bodywork underneath but its a very simple quick job.
Clive
I don't think I agree with the common belief that puller fans are better than pusher based on my understanding and experience with heat and mass transfer system design. Its really a decisioon to be made based on physical access preferences
With a wide radiator two smaller fans can be fitted either side of the bonnet spring if wanted.
I agree fitting a relay for 1 and definitely 2 fans is sensible.
cheers
Rohan
-
rgh0 - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 8414
- Joined: 22 Sep 2003
Firstly, welcome back Cliveyboy.
Are you planning to start producing some of your excellent Elan products again? I left it too late to buy some from you, but have learnt my lesson and won't make that mistake again.
Regarding the push vs pull question, I would have thought any effect is going to be negligible. The thermodynamic effects - heat increase due to pressure difference across the fan, frictional heating of the air, efficiency of the fan in hot vs cold air will be measurable, but tiny. Its not a jet engine.
Just from an airflow perspective, I would have thought a fan in front of rad would be much better - the space between the rad and engine is pretty cramped already.
Andy.
Are you planning to start producing some of your excellent Elan products again? I left it too late to buy some from you, but have learnt my lesson and won't make that mistake again.
Regarding the push vs pull question, I would have thought any effect is going to be negligible. The thermodynamic effects - heat increase due to pressure difference across the fan, frictional heating of the air, efficiency of the fan in hot vs cold air will be measurable, but tiny. Its not a jet engine.
Just from an airflow perspective, I would have thought a fan in front of rad would be much better - the space between the rad and engine is pretty cramped already.
Andy.
68 Elan S3 HSCC Roadsports spec
71 Elan Sprint (still being restored)
32 Standard 12
Various modern stuff
71 Elan Sprint (still being restored)
32 Standard 12
Various modern stuff
- Andy8421
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1223
- Joined: 27 Mar 2011
This is our full width radiator in aluminium showing mountings for two fan but only one fan fitted for Northern Europe. With the absence of Cliveboy we have recreated his cast aluminium combined thermostat housing / filler neck and usualy supply the radiator with out a filler neck fitted when this is used. Where twin fans are requested we supply a fused line and relay set to operate the fans.
http://www.coolexperts.co.uk/product/lo ... struction/
http://www.coolexperts.co.uk/product/lo ... struction/
- coolexperts
- First Gear
- Posts: 48
- Joined: 08 May 2012
11 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Total Online:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 59 guests