I did notice some gaps on the side of the shroud. I may try to seal those. And seal the gaps between the radiator and radiator support so all air must travel through the radiator.
yeah, if your fan was backwards, it'll be a HUGE difference.
Also, all of your internet friends will make jokes. :P

It happens to the best of us. Sometimes you can't see the forest for all the trees.Doing some reading on hotrod forums and it turns out I am not the only person who has done this. I guess it should say front on one side but since the guy i purchased the fan from painted over it i have no reference.
From what i read the part number stamped on the blades face the firewall.. mine was facing the radiator. I suppose if the pictures and info i found are true my fan was indeed on backwards.
I put it on to match the fan that was already on there when i upgraded to the 6.2 fan. I guess this means whoever installed the last fan also had it on backwards.
Maybe this is contributing to the overheating issue i have been having since a little while after the machine shop built the engine. its possible that without the AC condenser the backwards fan was able to keep up but adding the condenser pushed it over its limits.
I still need to drive it but it seems to pull the same amount of air as it did before so i don't know that its really the issue.
we can all laugh about it though, either way i installed a fan backwards and that is funny
IF and its a big fat IF this has a major impact this thing should run soooo cool, my entire cooling system has been rebuilt and upgraded.
one reason im skeptical that this is the "big issue" is my crappy luck with the windstar fans and how adding that 2199 cfm pusher only helped a tiny bit.
I am about to that point with this one.You could always "Roadkill" it...
Who needs a hood anyway?
I ran the windstars as pullers in place of the mechanical fan.Oh, one other thought. Your Windstar fans were probably less effective with the mechanical fan trying to push instead of pull. Kind of cancelling each other out.
Seems like flipping the fan should help pull more at idle. Also, are you sure the clutch is for a V-belt fan? Maybe not a serpentine set up? They make heavier duty clutches too. Might spin it faster at idle?
That's what he's saying. You're mechanical is trying to push air forward out the front of the radiator while the pusher fan is pushing the air back into the radiator. Making it a stalemate.I ran the windstars as pullers in place of the mechanical fan.
now im running a pusher in front