Traction Owner’s Club › Forums › Technical › Engine › Fitting an electric fan
Hi, I’ve had my 1956 TA 11BL since 1984; just back from a most enjoyable trip to northern France, only to overheat in stopped traffic on the M25. Had to leave it to cool for ~20 minutes before I could restart the engine. Under normal driving the engine maintains a fairly constant 50-70 °C, but when stationary in traffic it quickly rises beyond 80 °C and at that point the engine starts to run fairly rough & won’t restart until it has cooled down.
Sorry for so many questions, but I’ve never added an electronic cooling fan to a car before!
Many thanks,
Julian, West Sussex UK
Revotec have just confirmed that they do NOT make any 6V controllers ;-(
Julian
Julian,
Having owned Tractions for over 50 years – and driven them in all possible ambient temperatures – I am not an advocate of electric fans.
I see them as not only unnecessary, but also something else to go wrong. If the cooling system is already compromised, I think blocking off more of the radiator by fitting an electric fan is only going to hide the problem – and possibly exacerbate it.
In my experience the only reason for a well-tuned engine to overheat is poor coolant circulation, almost always due to a build up of debris in the radiator or block … or both.
Flushing a radiator is usually enough to clear it, otherwise it should be recored or replaced. Clearing the block can be more of a problem because the silt tends to set like concrete and, in time, drastically reduces the capacity of the water jacket. Once that happens no amount of flushing is likely to clear it. Ofen, the only solution is to strip the engine and chisel the stuff out.
I appreciate not everybody shares my opinion on electric fans and I hope others will respond with their answers to the questions you have posed.
A final thought. In extremely high temperatures, fuel vaporisation can happen even with the best maintained engines, but that is not the problem I understand you to be experiencing.
B….
