viscous fans

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oorwullie61

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 9, 2009
Messages
94
can anyone shed any light of the advantages of installing a viscous fan to an xtrail, i have heard they help with fuel and have better cooling properties, and has anyone had experiance fitting one:thumb2
 
can anyone shed any light of the advantages of installing a viscous fan to an xtrail, i have heard they help with fuel and have better cooling properties, and has anyone had experiance fitting one:thumb2

I guess it depends on what you are comparing it too/starting from...

If you currently have a fixed fan, then as a viscous one is basically only active when the engine is hot, it allows the car to warm up quicker, and takes less power from the engine when the engine is cold, both of which help fuel consumption. Not sure I could ever say it had better cooling properties though, as it is basically the same fan, with the ability to slip when cold.

The best option is really an electric fan, which has no direct connection to the engine, and only comes on when hot. Better still, it can cool the engine, at low revs which neither fixed or viscous can, so is better when travelling at slow speeds.

Personally, if I was thinking of spending the money on any form of conversion, I would go electric, and stay away from the viscous.
 
viscous fan

I guess it depends on what you are comparing it too/starting from...

If you currently have a fixed fan, then as a viscous one is basically only active when the engine is hot, it allows the car to warm up quicker, and takes less power from the engine when the engine is cold, both of which help fuel consumption. Not sure I could ever say it had better cooling properties though, as it is basically the same fan, with the ability to slip when cold.

The best option is really an electric fan, which has no direct connection to the engine, and only comes on when hot. Better still, it can cool the engine, at low revs which neither fixed or viscous can, so is better when travelling at slow speeds.

Personally, if I was thinking of spending the money on any form of conversion, I would go electric, and stay away from the viscous.

many thanks for your feedback appreciate it oorwullie:bow
 
I guess it depends on what you are comparing it too/starting from...

If you currently have a fixed fan, then as a viscous one is basically only active when the engine is hot, it allows the car to warm up quicker, and takes less power from the engine when the engine is cold, both of which help fuel consumption. Not sure I could ever say it had better cooling properties though, as it is basically the same fan, with the ability to slip when cold.

The best option is really an electric fan, which has no direct connection to the engine, and only comes on when hot. Better still, it can cool the engine, at low revs which neither fixed or viscous can, so is better when travelling at slow speeds.

Personally, if I was thinking of spending the money on any form of conversion, I would go electric, and stay away from the viscous.
many thanks for your feedback appreciate it oorwullie
 
I fitted twin electric fans to my Terrano, makes a good differance
 

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