PatGalvin said:Hi Art
Are you pretty happy with the Spal mounts that you shared in the photo? Also, what size and style Spal fan did you purchase? I see there are several different models and sizes depending on application.
Cheers,
Pat
martx-5 said:deadair said:...
I'm also looking for creative ideas on how to mount the fan to the radiator. The only places I feel safe drilling holes are in the top and bottom mount brackets. The only other alternative is some sort of clamping solution.
I don't know which model Spal you have, but you can see how I mounted mine with their (Spal's) mounting kit in this thread.
deadair said:martx-5 said:deadair said:...
I'm also looking for creative ideas on how to mount the fan to the radiator. The only places I feel safe drilling holes are in the top and bottom mount brackets. The only other alternative is some sort of clamping solution.
I don't know which model Spal you have, but you can see how I mounted mine with their (Spal's) mounting kit in this thread.
Those are the exact mounting points I was thinking about. How's it working out for you so far? Any noise or vibration issues?
deadair said:Thanks for all the information so far. Now what about the location of the temp sensor? I can screw it directly into the back of my water pump housing, where that square-headed plug is normally installed. Is this an acceptable place for the probe?
Ideally, there would be a suitable port in the radiator to accept the sensor, but there isn't and I'd rather not take it to a welder for modification.
martx-5 said:On all the fans I've seen, they have two separate wires. One positive and one negative. A lot of times, the fan manufacturer has you switch the wires and flip the fan if you want to turn a pusher into a puller. Whatever the manufacturer decides is the positive wire for the application is the one you hook to positive, whether it's ground or not. If you switch polarity in the future, just switch the the fan wires also.
TR3driver said:
IOW, yes, you will hook the positive wire to ground for a positive ground installation. But with most fans, which wire is "positive" depends on whether you are configuring it as a pusher (in front of the radiator) or puller (behind the radiator).
TR3driver said:Are you going to use one of their controllers?
TR3driver said:If it's a simple switch-type sensor with a relay and no solid-state electronics, then it will probably be OK. (But check for any diodes around the relay, which would have to be reversed or removed.)
But I seriously doubt that their PWM fan controller, for example, can be made to work with positive ground.
Positive ground is so rare these days that most auto accessory makers don't even consider it, or mention whether their products will work with it or not.