removing mechanical fan for MPG gain
#31
#33
Yeah, I just kept mine standing up on the floor in between the back of the drivers seat and the back seat. I rarely had passengers in the back of the extended cab and when I did they sat on the passenger side so I didn't have to scoot my seat forward too far while driving.
#34
Equate to significant MPG gain? Probably not anything more than a .0x gain or so.. depending on how you drive; if you drive like me putting your foot in to it when the clutch is engaged then you might see a better difference... (Or rather that of winter driving slightly) not having it drag the engine when other wise normally engaged.. you might see half a mile difference or so? Thats about what it felt like but that was minimal at best... (At least for me)
Honestly the key points for me..
-less strain on the engine means a little quicker responce from a stop.
-AC works better WOOT WOOT and more consistant instead of nice cold one moment and luzl luke cool another..
-Maybe some better mpg but minimal but over time would add up...
Last edited by jondakotaguy; 05-13-2014 at 07:25 PM.
#35
Long story short... nobody can tell you if it will work for sure in YOUR truck in YOUR part of the country with the weather and driving conditions that YOU will be facing.
All I know is that running completely without a fan in the winter months was fine for me. And if you do decide to try this just make sure to keep the fan in the back seat or in the bed of the truck. As long as you keep an eye on the temp gauge the worst case scenario is that you might have to pull over, shut the truck off, thread the fan back on and fire up the engine with the fan again. All of that should take well less than a minute, so I'd say go for it but just keep an eye on the gauges.
All I know is that running completely without a fan in the winter months was fine for me. And if you do decide to try this just make sure to keep the fan in the back seat or in the bed of the truck. As long as you keep an eye on the temp gauge the worst case scenario is that you might have to pull over, shut the truck off, thread the fan back on and fire up the engine with the fan again. All of that should take well less than a minute, so I'd say go for it but just keep an eye on the gauges.
Out side of that .. you just have to experiment most modern cars and trucks running on the roads have electric fans; retro fitting any car or truck is simply getting a fan that will pull enough air and having a good shroud to create the proper vacuum effect to get max efficiency out of the fan as possible.
Thats my next project other then basic upkeep is building me an actual custom shroud for my liberty fan and then putting a controller on it.
#36