>>> Hi,
>>>
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> the viscous fan and have been driving around without it. I have
> noticed a very significant reduction in engine noise,
Yes, fans are noisy things. Typically a viscous fan will engage after
starting a cold engine and for the first half mile or so before disengaging
until actually needed.
as well as
> improved warm up time.
I find that hard to believe considering the above and the fact that the
thermostat prevents the radiator having any part in cooling a cold engine.
Also, the engine now stays at temperature.
> And, before someone says it, yes, I have tried replacing the
> thermostat, and it made no difference what so ever.
Then perhaps you have another dodgy one. Not unknown.
> To answer Huw's question, while I am obviously a very big fan of land
> rover and their product, having had my own one since the age of ten, I
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> 99.9999999% of its life in the UK, where it is very unlikely to ever
> encounter anything even vaguely resembling a desert.
No towing or hard offroad work even? OK, fair enough an electric fan will be
fine but when it is needed it will switch itself on in the same way as a
viscous fan does. It will also create noise when it does so and use power.
Therefore, the
> ability of the vehicle to warm up faster, as well as the reduction in
> engine strain caused by the removal of the fan will be far more
> beneficial.
I thought it already had a viscous switched fan?
Should I ever venture off to morroco or some other desert
> like environment, and I felt for some reason that the electric fan
> was going to let me down, I could simply replace the viscous fan.
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>
> Robert
You will not notice a reduction in power but if you were to actually use it
hard at low speeds, for instance to pull a loaded sheep trailer in low ratio
up a mountain, as a lot of these things do on occassion, then you will run
into all kinds of problems from reduced power to overly hot combustion
unless the electric fan pulls through the intercooler as well as the
radiator. Remember that the original cowling will probably be removed to fit
the electric fan.
Huw
fanie - 16 Jan 2006 06:28 GMT
>>>> I am thinking of removing the fan from my 110 TD5, and fitting a
>>>> kenlow fan. However, does anyone know if this is likely to effect
>>>> the operation of my intercooler?
I have rebulit my 300TDi on a few occassions due to overheating
issues. My take on things is as follows. An ali cylinder head goes
from quite happy to completely shagged within a few seconds of getting
hot. A new head for a TD5 is long $$$'s. Your temp gauge is close to
useless. Keep the fan.
I can assure you that most vehicle temp gauges are kak. They are
designed not to move around too much so that people do not get alarmed
by normal fluctuations. I have run my landy with National Instruments
Datalogging equip attached with thermocouples measuring top tank and
bottom tank, air intake temp, under bonnet temp and block temp.
I could show you the graphs, but rest assured the temp are all over
the show and there was not a sign of movement from the temp gauge.
In summary by the time your temp gauge starts to give some indication
of a problem, your engine is probably already toast. Even in England,
I am sure traffic jams are not uncommon, and sitting in one for a long
time will tend strain your cooling system, not to mention that fact
that yoru fan will not be able to dump the underbonnet air.
Personally, I think you are nuts to run an engine as expensive to
rebuild as a TD5 without the proper cooling setup.
Just my tupence worth.
Regards
Stephen
PS: I am considering changing my Disco 300Tdi for either a Disco or
Defeneder TD5 at some point, but have the spares for TD5's come down
to sensible levels yet?
Austin Shackles - 16 Jan 2006 09:44 GMT
>Personally, I think you are nuts to run an engine as expensive to
>rebuild as a TD5 without the proper cooling setup.
>
>Just my tupence worth.
I'm inclined to agree. The 300 TDi had a minor water loss problem for a
long time, but the actual failure that did the head in was a sudden one.
Mind, in temperate climates, the engine can idle all day without
overheating, I suspect - these modern diesels are sufficently efficient as
not to need quite so much cooling except when working hard.
especially true of the one LR don't make, the non-turbo Di. The Ford 2.5
one I have in the minibus needs the rad screening in cold weather to
actually achieve a sensible running temperature in normal use, and when
idling, the heater is capable of over-cooling the engine. I've noted this
trait on other Di diesels. Turbo ones generate a bit more heat when
running, and quite a lot more probably if working hard, but very little more
at idle.

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Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
"The boys are dreaming wicked or of the bucking ranches of the night and
the jollyrodgered sea." Dylan Thomas (1914 - 1953) Under milk wood