• Hi Guest!
    You can help ensure that British Car Forum (BCF) continues to provide a great place to engage in the British car hobby! If you find BCF a beneficial community, please consider supporting our efforts with a subscription.

    There are some perks with a member upgrade!
    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Subscribers don't see this gawd-aweful banner
Tips
Tips

Thermostatic fan switch that fits Bugeye radiator temperature sensor hole?

DanLewis

Jedi Trainee
Offline
When I installed the 1275 in my Bugeye, I moved the temperature sensor from the radiator to the engine block. I've been thinking of adding an electric fan for those hot summer days and just wondered if there's a thermostatic fan switch from some other make and model British car that will screw into the hole in the side of the stock Bugeye radiator. For example, something like this one for a Spitfire: https://www.ebay.com/itm/200278709556?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1438.l2649

Has anyone ever found such a switch?

Dan
 
What's the thread and size? If it's 3/8 18 NPT then this might be the ticket:

https://www.summitracing.com/parts/der-16750/media/images
der-16750_w.jpg
 
What's the thread and size? If it's 3/8 18 NPT then this might be the ticket:

Unfortunately, I think it's some sort of British thread size. I tried to find a threaded plug for the hole in the radiator from Home Depot and Orchard Supply Hardware, but the threads were wrong. I think they were NPT. I finally found one that fit from Moss, so I assume the threads are not NPT.

Dan
 
My radiator guy had a plug that fit, not sure what the threads or size were though but it looked like 3/8 pipe.
I'm sure somebody knows this.
 
IIRC, 5/8 x 18 tpi will fit.
 
I think John is right, but it is not the correct size. It will fit with persuasion and will seal and hold under pressure.
 
OK, but that still leaves the question as to whether or not there is a thermostatic fan switch that fits 5/8 x 18 tpi threads. The one that Rick found at Summit Racing was 3/8 18 NPT.

Dan
 
yes, i think it was used in a dodge colt. I picked one up at my FLAPS.
 
I think this is it: Beck/Arnley number 201-1158

Contact Peter C at WorldWide Auto Parts. He will know.
 
I think this is it: Beck/Arnley number 201-1158

I found a new one on eBay for $10 with free shipping. That's cheap enough to risk it, so I just went ahead and bought it. I'll know soon enough. :smile:

Dan
 
Make sure it is a temp sender for a fan control and not for a temp gauge. Most work thru a relay and have data on cut in and out.

Kurt.
 
Hi Kurt,

Make sure it is a temp sender for a fan control and not for a temp gauge. Most work thru a relay and have data on cut in and out.

Right! When it arrives, the first thing I intend to do is test it both electrically and mechanically. So far, my total investment in this "experiment" is only $10, so if it isn't what I need, it's not really a big loss. :smile:

Dan
 
Dan, did this work for you? I have a new early-style radiator with the bung in the tank that I want to use for a fan switch.
 
Hi Tom,

I have it installed, but (I'm ebaressed to say) I've never connected it to try. Anyway, it did fit.

Dan
 
Dan, I just bought a thermostst and sensor for my electric fan that has a sensor probe that slides into the radiator fins. It is totally external to the radiator and engine and the thermostat is adjustable. It is $30 on ebay. If you want more info on it I will go out to the garage and get the vendor's name.
Charlie
 
I went through this ordeal about a year ago. To make a long story short, Serck Motor Sport who is in the UK built my radiator. One of the questions I asked was what size the original bung. I was changing the bung size in radiator to 16mm for a thermo-fan switch anyway, but wanted to know. Roy who is production manger at Serck Motor Sport answered “Oh” that’s easy, the bung hole is ½ BSP (British Standard Pipe). Their are a few switches that size if you research.
 
I had a auxiliary electric fan mounted in front of the radiator on 59 Diamond. I turned it on with a toggel switch whenever the temperature started rising. It would lower the Temp Ok.
The drawbacks I had with it was that the fan was really loud and noisy . It sounded like a turbine jet engine when it wound down after turning it off. The other problem is after you mount the fan in front of the radiator you may have trouble putting the bonnet safety bar in place across the front of the fan and your bonnet may not close all the way without a littlle bending . This assumes you don't have a forward tilting bonnet.
 
No problem with standard bonnet opening, I mounted the fan posterior to enable the oil cooler to fit in front, slight modes to radiator shroud for oil cooler lines, suction and discharge other than the fan noise which I’ll live with keeping the extra HP for the engine.

View attachment 32233View attachment 32236
 
Back
Top