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Disassembling viscous fan

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  • #46
    Originally posted by BUSHWHACKER
    cough.....Astra GTE.....cough.
    Was expecting you to say off something butch or racey, but .............,
    how could you!

    Comment


    • #47
      Originally posted by john.sally
      well i have gone from a doggy fan, blocked rad(mud) ineficent oil cooler, aircon rad and fans stopping air from below and 4 spot lamps infront of rad to clean rad, no aircon no spots and a kenlowe fan and cooler
      Not much then. I keep toying with the idea of removing the aircon.
      If only just to get rid of those poxy fans underneath. You can't reach
      anything from below without getting your hand trapped on those.

      Comment


      • #48
        Originally posted by MattF
        Was expecting you to say off something butch or racey, but .............,
        how could you!

        I know, the only time a vauxhall has been of any use.

        Comment


        • #49
          Originally posted by dave.j.robbo
          I like the idea of the silicon.
          With the silicone though, (considered that idea), surely the silicone
          would literally shear after a while, allowing movement in the mech
          again. When you consider the amount of wind resistance the blades
          are up against, surely it's only a matter of time before it gets broken
          up internally?

          Comment


          • #50
            Originally posted by BUSHWHACKER
            I know, the only time a vauxhall has been of any use.
            Do you have any closeups of your bonnet? Can only ever remember
            seeing sideon pics of your girl. Just out of interest, did you have much
            of a job spraying your a-bar black, or is chrome easily enough sprayed
            over?

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by MattF
              Do you have any closeups of your bonnet? Can only ever remember
              seeing sideon pics of your girl. Just out of interest, did you have much
              of a job spraying your a-bar black, or is chrome easily enough sprayed
              over?


              You need to really roughen the surface to get the paint to stick to the A-bar, I used chip resistant (load of c rap!) spray paint, should have used Hammerite satin black.
              Anyway the "chip resistant" paint er chipped and the bar was looking tatty so I've removed it now and gone for the naked front!
              This is the only pic I have at the moment of the vents. One is directly above the turbo, the hottest part of the engine, and the other one 'mirrors' it
              Attached Files

              Comment


              • #52
                Originally posted by BUSHWHACKER
                You need to really roughen the surface to get the paint to stick to the A-bar, I used chip resistant (load of c rap!) spray paint, should have used Hammerite satin black.
                Anyway the "chip resistant" paint er chipped and the bar was looking tatty so I've removed it now and gone for the naked front!
                Nice. I've got a big T.H crusher on the front of mine, only problem
                being that I aint no fan of chrome. Been thinking of how to alter its
                appearance. Know what you mean about specialised paints. Can't
                usually beat good old Hammerite.

                Originally posted by BUSHWHACKER
                This is the only pic I have at the moment of the vents. One is directly above the turbo, the hottest part of the engine, and the other one 'mirrors' it
                They do look quite discreet. Better than those large things like you
                tend to see on some 4x4's. Must admit, I'm getting more tempted.

                Comment


                • #53
                  Originally posted by MattF
                  With the silicone though, (considered that idea), surely the silicone
                  would literally shear after a while,
                  allowing movement in the mech
                  again. When you consider the amount of wind resistance the blades
                  are up against, surely it's only a matter of time before it gets broken
                  up internally?
                  You would think so....Tony has been keeping a Vfan for me for over a year, I just never seem to find the time to pick it up(could be cos I'm a lazy buggar)
                  I read a post, by Matt I think, that suggested locking it up with pva I filled it with silicon because I had it on hand and didnt see it as too much of a jump from silicon oil. i do a minimum of 500 miles a week in mine,usually a lot more than that with family visits to N Wales and Newcastle every couple of months and it seems to hold up well. Mostly Mway driving at slightly(cough) over 69.99mph. I will collect the fan from T and change the silicon oil(which I got from Toyota nearly a year ago) and stop the whooshing from frightening kids and other small furry animals honest.

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Originally posted by DaveD
                    You would think so....Tony has been keeping a Vfan for me for over a year, I just never seem to find the time to pick it up(could be cos I'm a lazy buggar)
                    I read a post, by Matt I think, that suggested locking it up with pva I filled it with silicon because I had it on hand and didnt see it as too much of a jump from silicon oil. i do a minimum of 500 miles a week in mine,usually a lot more than that with family visits to N Wales and Newcastle every couple of months and it seems to hold up well. Mostly Mway driving at slightly(cough) over 69.99mph.
                    I'm surprised it lasts that well. I considered various adhesives
                    before I drilled and bolted, but each one I could think of had
                    pitfalls.

                    Silicone: Good on rough surfaces and against pull type force,
                    but not usually very resistant to twisting.

                    Epoxy resin: Strong stuff when cured, but pathetic at sticking
                    to smooth surfaces. Also, once subjected to a bit of repeated
                    pressure, brittles and cracks.

                    Not used PVA before, so unsure what that's like.

                    Originally posted by DaveD
                    I will collect the fan from T and change the silicon oil(which I got from Toyota nearly a year ago) and stop the whooshing from frightening kids and other small furry animals honest.
                    Good way of keeping the blighters away from your beast,
                    though. With you being a 3L man, cooling will be less of
                    a priority, I suppose.

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Originally posted by MattF

                      Good way of keeping the blighters away from your beast,
                      though. With you being a 3L man, cooling will be less of
                      a priority, I suppose.
                      Long boring story .....after my rad went on a trip to Wales I had poor starting and used about a litre of water on 40mile trips I did the starter contactsglow plugs, fuses, burped the coolant etc all on the advice of "expert mechanics" had T check it over and he reckoned same as me CHG tho everybody told me "no thats fine" T didnt have a compression tester so put it into Frogs Island and it was CHG.... you live and learn....Vfan was one of the things I tried (cleaned and changed oil I bought from model shop) was going to change it for one Tony had and even got the proper silicon oil from dealers.

                      praps the silicon gives the right amount of "drag", dunno but it seems to be working fine.....and I'm of the .....change fluids and if it ain't broke.......leave the buggar alone variety.

                      Comment


                      • #56
                        O.K. here's what I done......removed fan assembly, dismantled the viscous coupling, dicarded the front and middle sections, removed the fan and flippped it over, the using the existing threaded holes bolted the fan back onto the rear half of the viscous part using m8 allen bolts and put a dab of gripfil on the ends of the threads so the bolts won't work loose.




                        Sorry, I forgot this is the Mk2 version of my fan locking
                        Attached Files

                        Comment


                        • #57
                          Originally posted by MattF
                          You theoretically have a greater imbalance potential with
                          three bolts rather than two. I'm just curious now he's put
                          the sh*ts up me.
                          Apparantly the viscous fan itself is not suitable to be rotating at full speed all the time and can shatter due to the stress it is put through on direct drive. Although I realise some so far have not yet had a problem.
                          Also as far as cooling goes the fan is only needed at tickover and low speeds.
                          I did read all this on the forum somewhere.
                          Trust your Hound.

                          Comment


                          • #58
                            Originally posted by Taliesins
                            Apparantly the viscous fan itself is not suitable to be rotating at full speed all the time and can shatter due to the stress it is put through on direct drive. Although I realise some so far have not yet had a problem.
                            Also as far as cooling goes the fan is only needed at tickover and low speeds.
                            I did read all this on the forum somewhere.



                            Yep, I read that too, but it doesn't make any sense to me. Saying that at sustained high speed cruising the fan may shatter due to centrifugal force!!!! I don't think so. When the engine is hot the fan is theoretically locked anyway. A locked fan won't be rotating at full speed all the time, just whatever the engine revs are.

                            Comment


                            • #59
                              Originally posted by BUSHWHACKER
                              Yep, I read that too, but it doesn't make any sense to me. Saying that at sustained high speed cruising the fan may shatter due to centrifugal force!!!! I don't think so. When the engine is hot the fan is theoretically locked anyway. A locked fan won't be rotating at full speed all the time, just whatever the engine revs are.
                              I can see your logic but in theory (apparantly) the fan is in the line of the airflow which at speed is cooler than the engine therefore the fan (viscous) is actually cool and does not operate at full speed as the coupling is slipping supposedly it locks at low speeds when the fan itself is not being cooled by the airstream
                              Trust your Hound.

                              Comment


                              • #60
                                Originally posted by Taliesins
                                I can see your logic but in theory (apparantly) the fan is in the line of the airflow which at speed is cooler than the engine therefore the fan (viscous) is actually cool and does not operate at full speed as the coupling is slipping supposedly it locks at low speeds when the fan itself is not being cooled by the airstream
                                If that's true, though, it's not going to be working when most of
                                the surfs seem to suffer worst. At high speed.

                                Comment

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