Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Cooling Fan Thermostat Thermostat Or Cooling Fan?

Thermostat or cooling fan? - cooling fan thermostat

I have a 1994 Ford Escort Wagon, 1.9-liter engine. My radiator fan engages when the AC on, has not ignited, however, is during normal driving. Because the blower motor does not work I think the thermostat does not open and must be replaced. Is that correct?

3 comments:

gdwrnch4... said...

Check the temperature sensor fan.

http://www.faqfarm.com/Q/How_would_you_f ...

gdwrnch4... said...

Check the temperature sensor fan.

http://www.faqfarm.com/Q/How_would_you_f ...

davester said...

Not necessarily. Is the car overheating? If not, can not function normally. Oddly enough, says the thermostat fan say when he is activated, which acts as a valve in the engine coolant when the engine overheated. The fan is a separate switch (or solenoid) is activated controls, if the coolant has reached a certain temperature. If the coolant does not reach a certain temperature, the fan does not rotate.

I suspect that, because the climate is cold, may be sufficient supply of cold air into the radiator just by cooling the coolant, coolant is hot enough to activate the fan turns on.

If your car overheating ... that's another story ...

Post a Comment