buddy
Active Member
You can maybe use a heat gun and blow 300 degree air at the clutch and see if it kicks in. Or if its out it should basically stop spinning on its shaft.
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how can i test the fan clutch?
well i put the heat gun to it and it was hot as shit,,, and nothing, the fan felt like it got smoother and easier to turn it never tightened up
Start engine and see if it locks in while hot. The rotation of the clutch while the spring has the internal valve "on" allows fluid to fill the working chamber and lock in the clutch. If it isn't spinning it can't lock up.
So then your situation has improved with the new clutch? If you want it to kick in a little earlier just look at the free fan clutch mod, you can have it kick in at 205 or whatever just by bending a little piece of metal coil on the front of it.
Try 1/8 inch first. I'd still recommend re-calibrating the replacement clutch, as GM believed 260 was RED ZONE, not sure when factory clutches are calibrated to engage, but when my TEMP Gauge raed 210, my Scanner read 217. I adjusted mine until it engaged before 210. I had to do a total of 1/4" loosen on the coil. My clutch was about 1-2 years old GM dealer replacement. I'm not sure we've ever seen a cracked block out of an engine that was uncracked, and kept at or under 210.
Yep. You make your new bend closer to the end of the spring, making it longer.
so i straighten the existing coil on the tab out and bend a new one about 1/8 inch from the end that was previously bent?
Hey, thanks guys!! That link to the pics was great. I thought I was understanding the origional description but needed to be sure. The 94 in my sig line is planned to be a tow rig and I'm seriously looking for mod ideas to make it very dependable. In other words, no overheating problems like they are known to do in stock configuration.
Don