97Ranger3.0
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2017
- Messages
- 172
- Reaction score
- 67
- Points
- 28
- Location
- Florida
- Vehicle Year
- 1997
- Make / Model
- Ford
- Engine Type
- 3.0 V6
- Engine Size
- 3.0
- Transmission
- Manual
- 2WD / 4WD
- 4WD
- Total Lift
- 4"
- Tire Size
- 33x12.5
Hey guys,
Probably 4-5 years ago I did the electric fan swap on my Ranger following the article for the Volvo cooling fan swap. At the time I couldn't find any of the correct Volvo fans in my local salvage yard, so I ended up grabbing a fan out of a 97 Thunderbird 4.6 because it looked like it would fit. It did fit with some minor trimming so I went with this fan instead, however I followed everything else in that article - using the Volvo relay, a 30 amp fuse, and the Volkswagen temp switch in my upper rad hose. Overall the setup has worked pretty well for me over the years.
However, occasionally the 30 amp fuse will blow (and by occasionally I mean probably less than once a year), and now after a few years it looks like the main fused power wire to the Volvo relay has been getting a little too hot. I've always assumed the reason my fuse has been blowing is due to the wiring job I did on it years ago, that there's probably a poor connection somewhere shorting out occasionally, but never looked into it entirely. However, I've been planning on adding an accessory fuse box to my truck to power other things, and have been thinking about rewiring the fan when I do that as well to hopefully have it be more reliable.
Anyways, I've been wondering if maybe the 30 amp fuse is incorrect for this fan. I just put a 30 amp fuse because the article said to for the Volvo fan, but obviously I'm not using that fan and should've considered that at the time of the swap lol... But I stumbled upon this fuse box diagram for a 97 Thunderbird, and I see two fuses for a fan of some sort.
#5 says radiator fan for 60 amps, and #16 for pusher fan at 30 amps. I'm confused on what the pusher fan fuse would be for. My only thought is that since the fan is 2-speeds, maybe the 30A is for low speed, 60 is for high? Or is the pusher fan for something else entirely? And if the cooling fan requires a 60A fuse on a thunderbird, how has the same fan been working on a 30A fuse for mine?
So my questions are, what size fuse would I actually need for this fan? Or, how can I know how much amperage this fan actually uses (It seems to me that the fan controlling for the Thunderbird is more complex than the Volvo relay setup, thus maybe needing a higher amperage of fuse for that reason)? And also, should I have 2 separate fuses for low and high speeds?
Thanks in advance,
Alex
Probably 4-5 years ago I did the electric fan swap on my Ranger following the article for the Volvo cooling fan swap. At the time I couldn't find any of the correct Volvo fans in my local salvage yard, so I ended up grabbing a fan out of a 97 Thunderbird 4.6 because it looked like it would fit. It did fit with some minor trimming so I went with this fan instead, however I followed everything else in that article - using the Volvo relay, a 30 amp fuse, and the Volkswagen temp switch in my upper rad hose. Overall the setup has worked pretty well for me over the years.
However, occasionally the 30 amp fuse will blow (and by occasionally I mean probably less than once a year), and now after a few years it looks like the main fused power wire to the Volvo relay has been getting a little too hot. I've always assumed the reason my fuse has been blowing is due to the wiring job I did on it years ago, that there's probably a poor connection somewhere shorting out occasionally, but never looked into it entirely. However, I've been planning on adding an accessory fuse box to my truck to power other things, and have been thinking about rewiring the fan when I do that as well to hopefully have it be more reliable.
Anyways, I've been wondering if maybe the 30 amp fuse is incorrect for this fan. I just put a 30 amp fuse because the article said to for the Volvo fan, but obviously I'm not using that fan and should've considered that at the time of the swap lol... But I stumbled upon this fuse box diagram for a 97 Thunderbird, and I see two fuses for a fan of some sort.
#5 says radiator fan for 60 amps, and #16 for pusher fan at 30 amps. I'm confused on what the pusher fan fuse would be for. My only thought is that since the fan is 2-speeds, maybe the 30A is for low speed, 60 is for high? Or is the pusher fan for something else entirely? And if the cooling fan requires a 60A fuse on a thunderbird, how has the same fan been working on a 30A fuse for mine?
So my questions are, what size fuse would I actually need for this fan? Or, how can I know how much amperage this fan actually uses (It seems to me that the fan controlling for the Thunderbird is more complex than the Volvo relay setup, thus maybe needing a higher amperage of fuse for that reason)? And also, should I have 2 separate fuses for low and high speeds?
Thanks in advance,
Alex