Just wired up a direct rocker switch to my radiator fan by tapping in to the circuit fuse for the fan otherwise. I had installed the new fan a few months back- and NEVER COULD find any stupid plug to plug the connector back into- I looked everywhere for it - very frustrating
So anyway I put the rocker switch setup yesterday and it works OK- I can turn the fan off and on manually, and it has an inline fuse (A "tap" double fuse I got from china on ebay wouldn't go into the fuse box, although a fuse goes in no problem- cut the blades down and still no go- another frustration
Then later I got thinking- I wonder if I could just establish a new circuit and just run it through the coolant sending switch that comes out of the thermostat housing and just let turn the fan on and off like it's supposed to?
I think it works in reverse- and like the kill switch on my motorbike, grounds out the circuit that otherwise has power? I'm not that hip to the electrical thing- but it only has ONE terminal, so I assume that that is HOT. How does that work, and what would I need? I still have another inline fuse holder and the other one I'm using off the fusebox already.
Does it have to have some relay? If you know how to do this can you give me some advice or even a diagram sketch?
the direct wire up and switch works pretty well otherwise. I/ m out there in HOT Florida heat and the motor has to run about five minutes before it even starts to register on the gauge. The ancient 91 A/C is even working but rickety......
So anyway I put the rocker switch setup yesterday and it works OK- I can turn the fan off and on manually, and it has an inline fuse (A "tap" double fuse I got from china on ebay wouldn't go into the fuse box, although a fuse goes in no problem- cut the blades down and still no go- another frustration
Then later I got thinking- I wonder if I could just establish a new circuit and just run it through the coolant sending switch that comes out of the thermostat housing and just let turn the fan on and off like it's supposed to?
I think it works in reverse- and like the kill switch on my motorbike, grounds out the circuit that otherwise has power? I'm not that hip to the electrical thing- but it only has ONE terminal, so I assume that that is HOT. How does that work, and what would I need? I still have another inline fuse holder and the other one I'm using off the fusebox already.
Does it have to have some relay? If you know how to do this can you give me some advice or even a diagram sketch?
the direct wire up and switch works pretty well otherwise. I/ m out there in HOT Florida heat and the motor has to run about five minutes before it even starts to register on the gauge. The ancient 91 A/C is even working but rickety......
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