Jump to content

IGNORED

check your fans.....


justaZcarguy

Recommended Posts

And I'm not talking the glee club....

Yesterday I was out driving on a killer sunny day here in Forest Grove, after travelling for a couple of hours and cornering a bit on the country roads I noticed water hitting the windshield and my temp shooting up fast...

Not good.

Car got hotter and hotter as I desperatley searched for a hose. Finally I reached a friends house just as the temp amost topped out....

Carefully topping it off with water to limp her home I noticed a circle in the radiator like the radiator had been laid up against the fan, funny the damn thing seems tight, what the hell...And, water shooting out of the seam where the fan had struck the top / side...

Limped it home and upon closer inspection I found one of the blades had been rubbed and I noticed at the base there was a crack and if you flexed the blade it would hit the radiator.

Crap.

One wasted radiator and fan over a crack.

The morale of the story is check the blades, at the base by the circle. Don't let happen to you what happend to me.

By the way, has this happend to anyone else?

Enjoy....

Brian

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kyle (one of the moderators on this site and a member of the email list) had a similar problem when he put his L28 back into his 240. Apperently there is a little bit of a clearance issue when using the L24 fan on a L28 block with a bigger radiator (3-4 row).

When it's all sitting still everything is fine, but when running at high rpm's, the fan will flex enough and hit the radiator.

I'm not sure what Kyle has done to fix this problem but he was working on it about a month ago.

ps-there were no cracks in his fan either.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

While cleaning under the hood on my300Z I noticed little spider web looking lines on the plastic fan.Close inspection showed that there were little hairline cracks all over it.A nissan tech said it was common from years of heat. I have a metal fan on my 240.They say the plastic,being lighter ,causes less wear on the water pump bearing.At least it drips before it fails.I like metal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's the plastic type, and the engine in this car is stock. The distance with the car not running is almost an inch and a half.

Also the only fan that has rubbed is the one with the break.

At this point I'm thinking about going with electric.

Thanks for the replies....

Brian

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't know.

I doubt it, when the tire took the impact, there was a bit of rot under the battery tray & frame rail. Now I see that there was undercoating covering up areas that were also affected. With the weak areas the TC rod shoved the frame back, wrinkling the unibody area behind the tire area.

There's a painful pic below.

I'm thinking that it may be donor car time and start over. You will most likely see a post for a request on leads for a donor car in the pacific northwest...

I hate to say that. But I know how insurance companies work and they will just total it and I will need to but it back from them.

Fu%!.

Brian.

post-1330-14150792446946_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I may be able to be of help , I know of one '73 that would be a great donor car. Not being driven but alot of the work has been done , all new weather striping on glas and doors and hatch , body is stright and rust problems repaired . It 's just sitting next to a barn and has been for some time. and there is another z that I havent seen but am getting info on seems the owner has it stored at a relitives house and now is in jail so the relitive wants the car gone. Something like that , any way I am finding out.. " If it wasn't for BAD LUCK you wouldent have any at all !!" hang in there carguy :ermm: :ermm:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Guidelines. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.