THRILLBILLY
1/2 ton status
definitely putting a 180* thermostat back in tomorrow just to get the best of running both options and call it done. thanks for the information! 


With as much power as this thing has I'm not to concerned with the power it robs.Those direct drive solid mounted fans eat up your fuel mileage and performance as well.
Cool...so you a marine engine expert? I may dive into replacing my boat motor here soon with something a little more powerful. It's got a 220hp 305 in there now and I'd like to stick a 300hp 350 in there.just a word of warning is all... I'm a dinosaur, and I have seen this issue before. it's pretty common in the marine biz... it can lead to a wide variety of issues, carbon build-up, etc...
Ya I went with the 180 just because I do a lot of towing with this truck. Otherwise I probably would have gone with the 195. My engine tuner was recommending the 160. And has said he has run them on a bunch of different motors and never had a problem.This is a good thread, I'm.glad the 180 worked out, and I second keeping temp high
With as much power as this thing has I'm not to concerned with the power it robs.
Here's the deal on those electrical fans that I don't get and would interesting to see some dyno results. Nothing in life is free. An electric fan may not be directly connected to the engine mechanically but it is directly connected electrically. When you turn that fan on the load is switched to the alternator. And it takes power to make power. Meaning the alternator isn't 100% efficient it going to use up some addtional power beyond what the fan uses to create the current to spin the fan. I think the real savings with those electrical fans comes in weight. The blades are usually made of plastic so they require less energy to spin. Also they don't have to spin all the time.

What your saying doesn't make much sense. Something that takes 20hp to spin will take 20hp wether driven by the motor or driven an electric motor. The alternator has to turn rotational energy into electrical energy which isn't as efficient as taking it from the source itself.Alternators won't use up nearly the energy to spin as a direct driven fan blade setup, even one that's clutched.![]()
But that might help keep the theives away too. I have a RR if I wanna drive something nice.
huh? Air drag? 20 hp is 20 hp doesn't matter where that hp comes from.an alternator does not have the air drag that a fan does, yes it still takes power to spin electric fans, but running off of battery power is easier than draining power from the engine through the water pump, which is also draining power from the belt driving off of the crank... which is where you're robbing the power from.
Again a watt is a watt. Your alternator is definately dragging down the motor when you kick that on. You just don't notice it because your idle control valve makes up for it. You can do a simple conversion from watts to horsepower. Or horespower to watts. Try going to www.onlineconversions.com if you are that interested.When an alternator loads up, it's not really slowing down the engine like a fan or water pump is doing, dragging it down, I have NEVER felt or heard mine anyways, load the engine down when I fire up ALL of the of the 1250 watts of lighting on my Burb, yes I can hear the alternator kick in and start working it's butt off to keep up a charge, which it obviously fails at over a short time, but there is nothing physically dragging the engine down through the alternator, it spins through magnets and coiled wire.
They do that cause it mainly eliminates the need for a transmission.Gas motor driving an electric generator? hmm, well, I am pretty certain that they DO use a Diesel motor to run a big/huge electric generator to run trains,,, I wonder why that is.
I dont know what minimal means. Around 780 watts is about 1hp assuming 100% efficientcy. The only electric fan I could find online was a dual fan which required 40 amps. 40*14.4=576 watts that the alternator would need to produce. The alernator isn't 100% efficient so the alternator would require more rotational energy drawn from that motor in order to produce that power. I'd say the alternator is probably about 80% efficient. So you would need about 1.2 hp to just spin those fans. Once a mass is moving it doesn't require aditional energy to keep it going. Once the fan is spinning you're now dealing with the frictional forces of moving air. Which will be the same for an electric vs mechanical. The difference will be the efficientcy of the blades.the power rob of a high amp alternator drag is pretty minimal... whereas a bladed fan may "steal" 10hp to spin it, an alternator with a higher load is probably taking 1 hp or less to spin thru that extra load..