Overheating due to aux fan flaky-ness
Thanks very much,
Jim Lee
1995 E320 wagon
Through a new thermostat at it also while you are at it.
Thanks very much,
Jim Lee
1995 E320 wagon
I had this exact issue. Turned out I had to replace the entire fan assembly.
Here are my threads at Benzworld. Good info in both of them
http://www.benzworld.org/forums/w124...-fan-help.html
http://www.benzworld.org/forums/w124...erheating.html




So for what it's worth, here is what I learned:
- The blue low speed relay has the 15 Amp fuse and is controlled by the A/C controller. Low speed is achieved via a dropping power resistor just behind the left front headlight (British cars favor a series-parallel relay design). The A/C controller measures coolant temperature to determine if the A/C loads casuing a temp rise in the engine. If the temp is high, the LOW speed aux fans are activated via this relay to help alleviate the high temp condition.
- The green high speed relay has the 30 Amp fuse and is controlled directly by the A/C "superheat" or pressure switch.* This means that ONLY refrigerant pressure, not engine temperature, can activate the HIGH speed aux fans.
- With a properly functioning fan clutch, the correct thermostat and the A/C off, the cooling system is capable of maintaining normal engine operating temperature without the use of the aux fans. They exist solely to deal with the A/C heat load.
- On a late production Cabriolet with the square wiring harness, the thermistor sensor for the fuel injection and the cooling sense for the aux fans are now located in one part with four leads (e.g., the square connector).
- I discovered a cool test to quickly determine if the fans themselves are working. With the car off, spin one fan as fast as you can (they kind of resemble breasts so men will have no trouble with this) and then look for the other fan to start turning. Now do it with the other fan. You should get the same. This works because the fans are permanent magnet motors wired in parallel so the one you are spinning is acting as a generator which feeds the other fan causing it to turn. If the fans don't behave this way, there is something wrong with the fan motors or the wiring between them. It's a very sensitive assessment of the condition of the bearings and brushes too because even small problems will prevent the slave motor from turning.
- FD
* Many auto A/C systems use a technique called superheat to increase system efficiency. What they do is reduce airflow over the condenser while the compressor is running thus causing it to "superheat". Once the pressure in the system gets high enough (indicating the the condenser is hot enough), high air flow via fans is added. The superheated refrigerant then rapidly gives up its heat, causing significant extra cooling at the evaporator end.
Last edited by Floobydust; Sep 24, 2010 at 12:17 AM. Reason: fixed typo



