68Electra
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2010
- Messages
- 2
- Vehicle Year
- 2000
- Transmission
- Manual
I thought I would do a write up of my electric fan installation and share it with you guys.
Here is my 2000 Ford Ranger
Whats missing here?
I actually just forgot to take a before picture. Just imagine a mechanical fan with shroud.
Some of you may have heard of the 90-95 Taurus fan which puts out 4500 cfm on high. Well V8 thunderbirds in the 90s with the 4.6l had an even larger fan with that same motor. I got this at the Pick 'n' Pull for $25.
But you can see its huge. You would't think it would fit, but the ranger radiator is taller than it is wide. It actually extends down behind the bumper.
Now that motor is larger diameter and actually pretty shallow, but it is a tight fit in a compact pickup. You can see it hits the water pump pulley which is where the mechanical fan was mounted.
To trim it shroud nice and evenly, I used 3/4" masking tape to mask off the line to be cut.
I also used a 3/4" board so I could use a utility knife to make mulitple cuts until I cut through the plastic.
Worked pretty good.
I have a helper.
The factory mounting tabs go in my way, so out came the hacksaw.
Trimming mostly complete. Later I cut the tabs off.
Other side.
Oops, I didn't think to check fan clearance on the other side. Frankly I lucked out here. In fact I ended up spacing the fan back out 1/8th of an inch for extra radiator clearance from the blades.
The fan goes in sideways. I tried it both ways to see which gave me more clearance. The motor on the fan is larger diameter, but actually very flat, but there isn't much room. It is a compact truck after all, and the 4 cylinder is longer than a V6. Its hard to tell, but with the power connector up the motor is more offset away from the pulley.
I got some corner brackets, clip nuts and machine screws from the hardware store. I riveted the brackets to the shroud and used some existing holes and had to drill some others. I used three rivets on each because its plastic, but 2 screws on each bracket was plenty secure.
Here is my 2000 Ford Ranger

Whats missing here?

I actually just forgot to take a before picture. Just imagine a mechanical fan with shroud.
Some of you may have heard of the 90-95 Taurus fan which puts out 4500 cfm on high. Well V8 thunderbirds in the 90s with the 4.6l had an even larger fan with that same motor. I got this at the Pick 'n' Pull for $25.

But you can see its huge. You would't think it would fit, but the ranger radiator is taller than it is wide. It actually extends down behind the bumper.

Now that motor is larger diameter and actually pretty shallow, but it is a tight fit in a compact pickup. You can see it hits the water pump pulley which is where the mechanical fan was mounted.

To trim it shroud nice and evenly, I used 3/4" masking tape to mask off the line to be cut.

I also used a 3/4" board so I could use a utility knife to make mulitple cuts until I cut through the plastic.

Worked pretty good.

I have a helper.

The factory mounting tabs go in my way, so out came the hacksaw.

Trimming mostly complete. Later I cut the tabs off.

Other side.

Oops, I didn't think to check fan clearance on the other side. Frankly I lucked out here. In fact I ended up spacing the fan back out 1/8th of an inch for extra radiator clearance from the blades.

The fan goes in sideways. I tried it both ways to see which gave me more clearance. The motor on the fan is larger diameter, but actually very flat, but there isn't much room. It is a compact truck after all, and the 4 cylinder is longer than a V6. Its hard to tell, but with the power connector up the motor is more offset away from the pulley.


I got some corner brackets, clip nuts and machine screws from the hardware store. I riveted the brackets to the shroud and used some existing holes and had to drill some others. I used three rivets on each because its plastic, but 2 screws on each bracket was plenty secure.
