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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

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| stonesie |
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 stonesie World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 13:16 - 14 Jul 2010 Post subject: |
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If you have the AirCon switched on then it will run the fans to keep the condenser chilled  |
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| Casper |
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 Casper World Chat Champion
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| Odie |
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 Odie World Chat Champion

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| Casper |
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 Casper World Chat Champion
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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Jan 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 14:18 - 14 Jul 2010 Post subject: |
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I've had the car for a few years, it started doing this about 3 months ago but I haven't got round to having a proper play with it yet.
Not too concerned in summer where it may appreciate the extra cooling but I don't really want it doing it all through winter as the engine will take ages to warm up etc etc.
I'll try and find the temp sender later .
Oh and it doesn't have A/C. |
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| stonesie |
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 stonesie World Chat Champion

Joined: 04 Jul 2010 Karma :     
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 Posted: 14:44 - 14 Jul 2010 Post subject: |
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https://www.corolland.com/repairs.html
Have a look at that, the temp sensor should be on the side of the cylinder head above the gearbox, the most simple test i can think of is to simply un-plug it with the fan running, if the fan keeps running then its most probably the relay, if not then a new sensor is worth a try. |
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| WD Forte |
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 WD Forte World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Jun 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 23:00 - 15 Jul 2010 Post subject: |
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Ditto the 'disconnect the rad switch' idea
As they are either On or Off, rad/fan temp sensors are often bimetal switch affairs and the contacts have been known to fuse together.
Engine temp sensors are commonly NTC resistors whose resistance drops as they heat up and dont suffer the same way.
Rad/fan switches are often attached to the rad body or a main hose.
Dont confuse it with the temp gauge sender.
Dont have a WD for the car but typically, when the switch gets to a certain temp the bimetal strip distorts and closes the contacts
this in turn gives the relay coil an earth path which actuates the relay
and runs the fan.
With the connector opened you can emulate the switch by shorting the two wires together and see if it operates the fan
If it does, you know the rad switch is faulty
If it doesnt
Its possible but less common for the relay contacts to fuse together
but a continuity test on the power contacts will tell you if thats happened.
the above is what you often find, it may have a much more complex system for all lI know
I havent had a car in years I either ride bikes or drive scabby
diesel transits
HTH ____________________ bikers smell of wee |
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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Jan 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 07:34 - 16 Jul 2010 Post subject: |
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| WD Forte wrote: | Ditto the 'disconnect the rad switch' idea
As they are either On or Off, rad/fan temp sensors are often bimetal switch affairs and the contacts have been known to fuse together.
Engine temp sensors are commonly NTC resistors whose resistance drops as they heat up and dont suffer the same way.
Rad/fan switches are often attached to the rad body or a main hose.
Dont confuse it with the temp gauge sender.
Dont have a WD for the car but typically, when the switch gets to a certain temp the bimetal strip distorts and closes the contacts
this in turn gives the relay coil an earth path which actuates the relay
and runs the fan.
With the connector opened you can emulate the switch by shorting the two wires together and see if it operates the fan
If it does, you know the rad switch is faulty
If it doesnt
Its possible but less common for the relay contacts to fuse together
but a continuity test on the power contacts will tell you if thats happened.
the above is what you often find, it may have a much more complex system for all lI know
I havent had a car in years I either ride bikes or drive scabby
diesel transits
HTH |
Thanks, I'll try that . |
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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

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| swampy |
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 swampy World Chat Champion

Joined: 04 Aug 2004 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:08 - 16 Jul 2010 Post subject: |
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I had a similar problem once on a Renault Espace. The thing you have there is a plug connector, may well only be Toyota only. I cut the plug off on the renault,and then crimped two teeny female (well three in the Renaults case) spade conectors onto the wires, then pushed these onto the pins on the fan switch. Add a bit of insulation tape and voila, all was well......  ____________________ "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me." Hunter S Thompson
"Faster, faster, faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death..." Hunter S Thompson |
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| WD Forte |
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 WD Forte World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Jun 2010 Karma :   
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| finpos |
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 finpos World Chat Champion
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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

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Old Thread Alert!
There is a gap of 10 years, 90 days between these two posts... |
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| DannoXYZ |
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 DannoXYZ L Plate Warrior
Joined: 10 Oct 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:00 - 13 Oct 2020 Post subject: |
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| stonesie wrote: | https://www.corolland.com/repairs.html
Have a look at that, the temp sensor should be on the side of the cylinder head above the gearbox, the most simple test i can think of is to simply un-plug it with the fan running, if the fan keeps running then its most probably the relay, if not then a new sensor is worth a try. |
| WD Forte wrote: | Ditto the 'disconnect the rad switch' idea
As they are either On or Off, rad/fan temp sensors are often bimetal switch affairs and the contacts have been known to fuse together.
Engine temp sensors are commonly NTC resistors whose resistance drops as they heat up and dont suffer the same way.
Rad/fan switches are often attached to the rad body or a main hose.
Dont confuse it with the temp gauge sender.
Dont have a WD for the car but typically, when the switch gets to a certain temp the bimetal strip distorts and closes the contacts
this in turn gives the relay coil an earth path which actuates the relay
and runs the fan.
With the connector opened you can emulate the switch by shorting the two wires together and see if it operates the fan
If it does, you know the rad switch is faulty
If it doesnt
Its possible but less common for the relay contacts to fuse together
but a continuity test on the power contacts will tell you if thats happened.
the above is what you often find, it may have a much more complex system for all lI know
I havent had a car in years I either ride bikes or drive scabby
diesel transits
HTH | Nope, the opposite. I found this post from searching for "Corolla cooling fan" and will clarify for others who may find it as well.
First, temp-sensor by thermostat near head only drives gauge on dash, has nothing to do with cooling fan.
Second, fan thermoswitch on radiator is just that, an on/off switch based upon coolant-temperature.
However, it operates opposite of what one would assume. Toyota's very sophisticated, and has additional safety features we're not used to on bikes. So...
NORMAL = OFF = fan thermoswitch circuit is closed and grounded. This actually turns OFF relay powering fan.
HEATED = ON = fan-thermoswitch circuit is open, not-grounded. This turns ON relay that powers fan
It's a safety feature such that if fan-wiring is cut, or unplugged from thermoswitch, or thermoswitch has failed like this instance, that fan would turn ON to keep engine from possibly overheating.
| DrDonnyBrago wrote: | Cheers for the suggestions, will have a hack soon. I should be able to figure something out. Thanks all  .
| WD Forte wrote: |
I assume the fan does not come on with ignition now?
It shouldnt, I'm slightly puzzled how a broken cable made the fan run all the time. |
It comes on all the time, I'm guessing it's some sort of safety mechanism - better to always be on than always off. Guessing when cold the thermoswitch is closed and a relay is held open, breaking the wires would leave the relay closed and the fan on. |
Yup, as you've discovered, fan-thermoswitch circuit works in opposite way as one would think for safety. Disconnecting plug from thermoswitch, or cutting its wire or having a terminal corrode away would OPEN circuit and turn fan ON. Engenious safety design really.
I blew headgasket on my VF500F many years ago because of this exact issue. one of terminals on thermoswitch had broken away and never activated fan when bike overheated in stop-and-go traffic. If it was wired as Toyota had done, at least fan would've come on full-time and kept engine cool. And it would also signal that something's wrong with system, time to take look. |
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| Nobby the Bastard |
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 Nobby the Bastard Harley Gaydar

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| arry |
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 arry Super Spammer
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 5 years, 97 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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