You jest.
Just so. The so called viscous fan spanners are light weight and of no substance. And for what they are expensive. Just use the correct spanner out of your toolbox and a sharp blow with a persuader.
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You jest.
That’s the one. There is another size on the other end - one fits diesel the other V8 I think
Nah, both 36mm, only the thread is different. Think the 32mm is for Volkswagen or somesuch.
32mm for the fan on the bmw m51.
32mm for the fan on the bmw m51.
Must be the other way around then! Been a while since mine was last off.
The one I got off the Bay is made of silly putty.
They are so big and heavy for what they are, and ridiculously expensive (in my tight opinion). I’ve always been pro viscous, but my mind is swerving towards Datateks ideology lately.
The E36 one won’t stop - it broke my stick and is undamaged so think cheap ones are exactly that. @Grrrrrr i will still keep it as emergency spare even though it spins all time it’s so much lighter than original should be okay. I will send it to you if you ever need one
But you say there is no drive to the viscous some of the time and there is certainly no drive when it starts to fail, in that situation the cowl actually obstructs ram air flow. Many more powerful cars than the P38 diesel are just fitted with electric fans including all front wheel drive vehicles, they cope very well especially with latent heat at the end of a hot run. I do't care what others do, I have run almost all my cars with electric fans for over 50 years, the P38 diesel runs well with no viscous and is noticeably quieter with a quicker warm up in winter..Personally i would not ditch the viscous and shroud. The viscous draws air from the entire radiator surface because of the shroud. The aircon fans service only part of it. Use the aircon fans as backup by all means but also retain the viscous.
But you say there is no drive to the viscous some of the time and there is certainly no drive when it starts to fail, in that situation the cowl actually obstructs ram air flow. Many more powerful cars than the P38 diesel are just fitted with electric fans including all front wheel drive vehicles, they cope very well especially with latent heat at the end of a hot run. I do't care what others do, I have run almost all my cars with electric fans for over 50 years, the P38 diesel runs well with no viscous and is noticeably quieter with a quicker warm up in winter..
The thing is when either work they are fine, it’s when they play up - not broke just iffy. I’m just glad we have options
@plumbfisher i thought the backup usually only comes on impending overheat when it’s too late?
Variable drive true, a little drive even when cold after the initial burstKeith you do as you want no problem. Most of the time whilst driving the engine is cooled by ram air. But the viscous fan is variable drive it's not just on and off.
Variable drive true, a little drive even when cold after the initial burst
It's not just centrifugal force the removes the fluid, centrifugal force moves the fluid to the periphery, there is a crude little metal block with a V in the leading edge to evacuate the fluid, the metal block is on the drive plate runs in a groove in the driven plate. There is a lot more air going over the block in a RAM air situation with the viscous and cowl removed.No no drive after medium is returned to storage other than friction from seals. Whilst valve is open medium is constantly circulated back to storage. But amount valve is open varies with temperature. So amount of medium circulating also varies giving a controlled air flow. When engine is stopped and fan stops medium settles at lowest point. Engine cools and valve closes but there is still a pool of medium at lowest point. When engine is started that medium causes the fan to be driven until medium is dispersed and returned to storage by centrifugal force. That causes the temporary roar. The shroud is designed to draw cooling air from the entire radiator area when the viscous is active and to direct a flow of air back across the engine to cool the block externally. when ram air cooling is being used. So removing the shroud is not a very good idea.
there is a crude little metal block with a V in the leading edge to evacuate the fluid, the metal block is on the drive plate runs in a groove in the driven plate