T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1638.1 | my '96, same thing | ALFSS1::cop-dhcp-2-215.cop.dec.com::skinnerj | | Thu May 15 1997 13:26 | 7 |
| I have a '96 Blazer LS and experience the same thing intermittently under the
conditions you describe. I sense a loss of acceleration power at the same
time, though, and eventually the sound just suddenly dies and all operation
returns to "normal." I saw a "loss of power" technical service bulletin on
the Alldata web site, but haven't talked to my dealer about it yet.
Jay
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1638.2 | my dealer- same response | ALFSS1::cop-dhcp-2-215.cop.dec.com::skinnerj | | Thu May 15 1997 14:13 | 6 |
| Well, prompted by the base note, I finally spoke to the service writer at the
dealership where I bought my '96 Blazer LS, and he said the same thing- fan
noise. I'll keep monitoring- more closely now- too see if there really is no
loss of power, just noise.
Jay
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1638.3 | It ain't easy being Joe Cool... | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Thu May 15 1997 14:20 | 49 |
| ref 1638.1-2
What you are hearing is the high pitch of the fan pulling lots o' air.
What you are hearing when it suddenly goes away once you are underway
is it's thermostatically operated clutch taking the fan out of straight
drive and into a fluid-coupling drive that allows it to semi-freewheel
and not pull so much air. The semi-freewheel also frees up as much
as 15 extra HP for the ENGINE to use.
The fan should run kinda noisy on first startup even in Winter
and then quiet down in something less than 2 minutes... again, it's the
clutch letting go into freewheel/fluid coupling drive instead of locked
up in straight drive.
The clutch will also 'cycle' on a hot day or while the vehicle is
sitting and idling for extended periods.
This design is the first truly automatic fan which has a high cooling
capacity (a' la very high pitch fan), yet only steals HP and moves
LOTS of air when it's needed. The next generation of this concept is
the electric radiator fan which functions identically but is all
electric instead of the more rugged mechanical design... the HP loss
with electric fans is through loading the alternator.
Anyway, what you're hearing is perfectly normal. The only way to make
it quieter is to look for a car fan that'll fit your clutch that has
the 'staggered blade' design... three blades uniformly spaced opposing
two evenly spaced blades with large-ish gaps between the two 'clusters'
of blades. This prevents what is known as 'beat frequency' from
setting up among the 5 blades. I won't go into the acoustical physics
but suffice it to say, that style fan is about 1/2 as noisy as the one
you have and still does the same job. I'd check a boneyard for an
older GM rear wheel drive car with all the toys, (Dinosaurus, Detroitus,
Extinctus) for one of them. The clutch and fan assembly should fit
your water pump drive flange. All you need to verify is the same
diameter and no bent blades.
Next alternative is to remove the mechanical fan and install a HUGE
(17") electrical cooling fan and thermostatic switch. The fan's relay
should also be activated any time the AC clutch is activated just for
that extra anticipative cooling boost when the air's on.
As for the "Loss of Power" technical bulletins... black hole...don't
even go there; it's not relative. That stuff's related to the electrical
and engine management electronics, not a mechanically driven fan.
If you don't want to tackle any of the above... learn to ignore it.
Regards,
|
1638.4 | Same for me - even on an older Astro | ZEKE::dmdg07.zko.dec.com::ASCHNEIDER | Andy Schneider - DTN 381-1696 | Fri May 16 1997 14:16 | 13 |
| I, too, had this in my 95 Jimmy. I also had this in my 88 Astro van
with the same 4.3L motor and same fan/clutch setup. My son used
to refer to this noise as the "school bus sound". On my Jimmy, it'd
do it mostly when cold, but it became very obvious when the noise
went away. It sure FELT like you were losing power when the
noise was on, and got more when the noise disappeared. And it may
very well have been true, since it was driving the fan full-throttle until
the clutch let it free-wheel a bit. But after 2 minutes or less it would
always quiet down, so I never worried about it. If yours is noisy all the
time I'd have the dealer check to see if the clutch is always keeping the
fan running full-time (when it shouldn't).
andy
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1638.5 | | SSDEVO::THELLEN | Ron Thellen, DTN 522-2952 | Fri May 16 1997 14:34 | 44 |
| ><<< Note 1638.4 by ZEKE::dmdg07.zko.dec.com::ASCHNEIDER "Andy Schneider - DTN 381-1696" >>>
> -< Same for me - even on an older Astro >-
>On my Jimmy, it'd
>do it mostly when cold, but it became very obvious when the noise
>went away. It sure FELT like you were losing power when the
>noise was on, and got more when the noise disappeared. And it may
>very well have been true, since it was driving the fan full-throttle until
>the clutch let it free-wheel a bit. But after 2 minutes or less it would
>always quiet down, so I never worried about it. If yours is noisy all the
>time I'd have the dealer check to see if the clutch is always keeping the
>fan running full-time (when it shouldn't).
I did a search on the internet for "clutch fan" and found the
following. It wasn't directly for the Blazer, but I would assume a
similar setup as this (this was talking about a GM vehicle):
"The mechanical fan used with the V08 cooling system contains a built-in
thermostatic clutch which senses the temperature of air that has been
drawn through the radiator. When the temperature of this air is below
66 degrees C (151 degrees F), the clutch freewheels and limits the fan
speed to 800-1,400 rpm. When the temperature rises above 66 degrees C
(151 degrees F), the clutch begins to engage, and the fan speed
increases to about 2,200 rpm."
Other info I found described the system as having a bi-metallic spring
which controls transfer of the clutch fluid from the free-wheeling side
to the driving side of the clutch based on temperature of the air
passing through the radiator. This fits with the above description as
far as the operation of the clutch fan.
If this indeed is how they work then I am confused. Why would the fan
be making so much noise, operating at full rpm apparently, when the
engine is cold? Wouldn't the control mechanism have the clutch in
primarily the free-wheeling mode when the engine is cold? One day this
week at lunch a buddy and I went out into the parking lot. We opened
the hood and he watched and listened as I started the engine. I then
walked around to the front of the vehicle and the noise was not too
loud. Suddenly, the fan noise increased dramatically and stayed that
way. I wouldn't expect the temperature to be sufficient to cause the
fan clutch to fully engage under these conditions. Maybe I'm missing
something.
Ron
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1638.6 | Lots o'air being pulled = lots o'noise... | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Mon May 19 1997 10:08 | 26 |
| ref. .5
Yep, you're missing something... the engine may idle at say 700rpm,
but the fan/water pump has a smaller than engine crank pulley, by
maybe 1/3 to 1/2 which means the fan rpm will be 1/3 to 1/2 X FASTER
spinning than the engine rpm.
Also, a high pitched fan is noiser than a shallow pitched fan. The
difference between say, 400 rpm and 2200 rpm will be significant
in terms of noise.
A radical but valid comparison would be between the noise a turbo-prop
plane makes with the props spinning while taxiing and the dramatic
change in noise when it is taking off. They INCREASE the pitch of the
props so they pull more air and move the plane. Once they are cruising,
they back off of the pitch to give quieter operation, yet the engines are
driving the props at EXACTLY the same rpm.
In this example, they are changing the PITCH instead of the rpm. In
the car's case, they are changing the rpm instead of pitch... either
case, same effect... more or less air being pulled, and pulling a
LOT of air is a NOISY proposition.
O.K.? Didn't lose you?
J-
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1638.7 | Why is the fan at full speed with a cold engine? | NETCAD::B_MACARTHUR | | Mon May 19 1997 11:56 | 6 |
| ref. .6
I think you missed Ron's point. He's wondering why his fan is running
at full speed (fully engaged clutch) when the engine is cold, not why
the fan is so loud at full speed. Maybe the thermostatic switch that
controls the fan clutch is bad.
|
1638.8 | | SSDEVO::THELLEN | Ron Thellen, DTN 522-2952 | Mon May 19 1997 12:33 | 29 |
| > <<< Note 1638.6 by BRAT::J_GALLAGHER >>>
> -< Lots o'air being pulled = lots o'noise... >-
> Also, a high pitched fan is noiser than a shallow pitched fan. The
> difference between say, 400 rpm and 2200 rpm will be significant
> in terms of noise.
OK, I don't have any problem understanding that.
However, I still am confused about this. Let me provide an additional
example.
Yesterday morning my wife and I went out early in the morning. As I
backed out of the driveway (uphill to the street) the fan was making
tons of noise. As I drove away from the house, the noise continued and
this went on for several miles before finally quieting down.
This morning I left for work, backed out of the drive same as yesterday
except that there was no noise from the fan, only the engine revving.
I drove all the way to work with no "abnormal" fan noise.
Other than the outside temperature being lower today - 40s as opposed
to 50s - everything was pretty much the same. Why is it noisy one time
and not the other?
I think I'm going to call the service technician at the dealer and talk
to him a little more about this.
Ron
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1638.9 | I'd vote for fan clutch replacement | PEAKS::OAKEY | | Mon May 19 1997 13:34 | 17 |
| My fan clutch died and was replaced several times on my old Jeep Wagoneer; I
got quite deft at replacing it until I decided to spring for a $65 clutch at
NAPA rather than the $35 clutches at Checker. Never had another problem after I
installed the NAPA one.
Symptoms sound the same; it roared almost all the time. I'd replace the fan
clutch, bet'll fix your problem.
Roak
Ps. I had one failure that was intermittent, it also sounds like you described
in -.1. Sometimes it roared, sometimes not.
PPs. I was able to fix the problem temporarily (very temporarily) by dousing
with WD40 the clutch, shaft and every nook and cranny in the clutch that looked
like it might let some lubricant inside. Fixed it for a week or two, then I
replaced it.
|
1638.10 | Which part of "normal" was unclear? | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Mon May 19 1997 14:37 | 38 |
| ref .7
I'm afraid you both missed my statement that that's the way they are
SUPPOSED to behav...
There's nothing defective with a fan clutch that acts like it's in
lockup when cold/cool. They're defective if they NEVER run fast (i.e.
"loud"), which means either the lockup clutch is shot or the fluid has
all leaked out.
They ALL run full lockup when "cold" for the following reasons:
1. IN COLD WEATHER, fluid thickens up and tends to require some
warming up to thin it out well enought to allow freewheeling.
2. IN HOT WEATHER, if the car is used for, say, short hops, shopping
etc. and parked warm, the ENTIRE clutch assembly gets hot from the
residual engine and radiator heat that builds up when the engine is
shut off. You see, even though the engine has been shut off,
it's STILL HOT plus the circulation of coolant and air through the
engine, radiator, and engine bay has suddlenly stopped... the heat
from the hot engine has nowhere to go, so it all just sits there and
cooks for a while. Volkswagen are one of the few carmakers whose
electric cooling fans will run even after the ignition is shut
off... primarily to prevent boilover and stress on gaskets and the
cylinder head.
Anyway, the clutch activating thermostatic spring gets heated up along
with the rest of it and puts the fan clutch in the lockup mode until
the engine is re-started and the fan can pull enough cool air through
the radiator to cool everything down under the hood. When it does,
the spring will retract and disengage the lockup clutch.
So, which words or syllables of my statement, "Operating Normally", did
someone not understand?
Regards,
J-
|
1638.11 | It's a TRUCK more than it's a CAR... | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Mon May 19 1997 14:56 | 29 |
| I have to agree with the reply which said he went to NAPA and bought a
"QUALITY" unit...
The manufacturers actually `price spec.' parts; i.e., they
tell the vendors to shave this/that quality tightness, thickness,
longevity etc. in order to save as little as fractions of a cent on a
per part price. In this particular case and in the case of items like
brakes, shocks, tires etc. the aftermarket parts are usually superior
to the standard (not heavy duty) quality factory ones. Fan clutches from
"Hayden", York, TRW etc. are ALL superior to the factory
`price-spec'ed ones.
There's also a point that might be overlooked here... Blazers etc.
are built upon TRUCK running gear mostly... that includes "BUS" fans.
They are passenger vehicles, but they are built for more abuse than
your father's Oldsmobile. If one wants quiet, then why buy a truck?
I too had some problems making the transition from car to truck about
1-1/2 years ago... except mine had a high pitch fan with NO clutch...
which sounded like a "BUS" full time! I put a clutch in... now it's
only noisy PART TIME which I can live with.
If you truly can't live with normally noisy truck cooling systems...
have an electric fan setup installed... it is mounted on the front
of the radiator/condensor and it's output is silenced by both cooling
cores.
J-
|
1638.12 | | SSDEVO::THELLEN | Ron Thellen, DTN 522-2952 | Mon May 19 1997 17:34 | 39 |
| > <<< Note 1638.11 by BRAT::J_GALLAGHER >>>
> -< It's a TRUCK more than it's a CAR... >-
J-,
Thanks for all the feedback. It is appreciated.
I spoke with my service technician and he said he is willing for me to
come in and have someone take a close look at it to see if perhaps it
is performing out of spec. I'll set that up soon and report back.
> There's also a point that might be overlooked here... Blazers etc.
> are built upon TRUCK running gear mostly... that includes "BUS" fans.
> They are passenger vehicles, but they are built for more abuse than
> your father's Oldsmobile. If one wants quiet, then why buy a truck?
I agree with this statement to a point. True, Blazers are built upon
truck running gear. By the way, just in case this isn't clear, I am
talking about the Blazer (formerly known as the S-Blazer) and not the
Tahoe (formerly known as the Blazer). Anyway, the typical buyer of any
of today's SUVs is not someone who is looking for a truck-like vehicle.
Most of these vehicles will never even see a dirt road, never mind do
any serious (or semi-serious) off-roading. I think most customer's
expectations in an SUV are for a comfortable vehicle with the
additional security of 4WD. After all, look at the interior of the top
of the line models! Heck, just about every car maker out there is
jumping on the SUV bandwagon.
> If you truly can't live with normally noisy truck cooling systems...
> have an electric fan setup installed... it is mounted on the front
> of the radiator/condensor and it's output is silenced by both cooling
> cores.
This is something that might be considered in the future. However,
since this thing is still under warranty, and will be for a while, I
don't want to change any component that might have GM pointing at later
as the cause of some failure.
Ron
|
1638.13 | Make 'em fix it, Ron...ref .12 | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Tue May 20 1997 12:37 | 54 |
| Ron,
I agree. You should try to seek satisfaction under warranty until the
vehicle suits you or they've run out of honest attempts or you run out
of patience and money.
There's literally no reason they couldn't have put an electric fan setup
in that particular vehicle...the more rugged mechanical design is
simply a carryover from it's light truck bloodline and probably isn't
necessary in well over 90% of the units sold.
Regardless of what consumer's expectations are, the American-built
SUV's are built on light truck-duty chassis and running gear... just
the way it is.
It's a paradox, actually... the SUV's have progressively been getting
puffed up with luxurious interiors, appointments and options, but when
you start adding 4X4, rugged tread tires, heavy duty towing pkgs.,stiff
springs, shocks etc... they become stiff and noisy compared to a CAR,
(which they're NOT).
It's kinda sad, really. Folks are paying some pretty high prices for
vehicles they expect to act like cars with 4WD. SOMETHING had to
replace the family station-wagon, and SUV's are a logical evolution;
but if you want REALLY luxurious, quiet and smooth 4X4's you either
have to get SUV's built from the ground-up on car type running gear
(Mercury Mountaineer comes to mind.. sort of car, minivan and SUV all
at once), or one of the waaayyyy over the top luxury SUV's like the big
Land Rovers or Lexus's, or the more sleek Audi, BMW, Mercedes
"quadra-trac" type luxury cars... That is if you care to spend an extra
$10-15K for not much else than a name. They're GREAT vehicles, actually,
but costly to buy, costly to maintain, and depreciate like a 1 week old
pizza. It becomes irrelevant whether they last any longer, perform better
or take any more abuse than a Blazer, Explorer etc.; a bad investment,
(er, unnecessary EXPENDITURE), is a bad investment.
As for the "extra security of 4X4", most folks have very little
understanding of the limitations of an SUV in terms of handling and
stopping and somehow are lulled into a false sense of security about
what "4X4" actually does for a vehicle. Primarily, it's a `launching'
mechanism used at low speeds only, to get the vehicle going in poor
traction conditions...that's about it. We're not talking the `out
back' or `sporting' uses for 4X4... just street use.
Most SUV's are actually more dangerous on icy or snow covered smooth
surfaces than the average mid to full size front wheel drive sedans on
the road today. It has more to do with the vehicle's physics, not
"4X4-ness". (see discourse in Dodge Durango notes).
Good luck with your dealer...
Regards,
John
|
1638.14 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | | Tue May 20 1997 14:48 | 15 |
| Re: <<< Note 1638.13 by BRAT::J_GALLAGHER >>>
>> ...what "4X4" actually does for a vehicle. Primarily, it's a `launching'
>> mechanism used at low speeds only, to get the vehicle going in poor
>> traction conditions...that's about it.
Reminds me of a favorite saying of mine (for street use of 4wd):
Four wheel drive will get you in trouble faster than two wheel drive.
I've got a friend with a similar saying (for off road use of 4wd):
Four wheel drive will get you stuck in better scenery.
Roak :-)
|
1638.15 | Yup, "4WD" ain't "Magic" | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Tue May 20 1997 15:45 | 21 |
| RE .14
Ayuuh, that's about the best summary of 4WD I've ever seen... not exactly
the kinda info. the vehicle VENDORS will freely share with you, for sure.
If they did, they wouldn't sell very many, would they?
You're absolutely right! "4WD SUV" means you can get into DEEPER trouble
FASTER than in a car which very QUICKLY warns you that you've crossed
over the line between safe operation and the Twilight Zone.
A friend of mine with an Explorer told me one morning that the previous
evening he was bombing down the highway about 65 in a snowstorm in
"4WD". Before he could do ANYTHING about it, a sudden a wind gust
caused him to do two complete 360's . He felt lucky no other vehicles
were close to him or that he didn't leave the road.
I asked what made him think that pushing a button or shifting a lever
magically changed his vehicle' center of gravity, profile to the wind,
tires, suspension, brakes etc.?
DUUHHH!
|
1638.16 | Normal operation... | SSDEVO::THELLEN | Ron Thellen, DTN 522-2952 | Thu May 29 1997 09:53 | 23 |
| > <<< Note 1638.12 by SSDEVO::THELLEN "Ron Thellen, DTN 522-2952" >>>
> I spoke with my service technician and he said he is willing for me to
> come in and have someone take a close look at it to see if perhaps it
> is performing out of spec. I'll set that up soon and report back.
I left the Blazer at the dealer yesterday. The results were...
"We drove it around the block and heard the fan noise. Then we took
another '97 from the lot and drove it and heard the same noise. Normal
operation."
So much for taking a close look!
This week it has actually been fairly quiet so I'm not sure they
actually heard the sound level that I have experienced on occasion.
Any idea on where I could find out detailed specs on the operation of
the fan clutch, e.g., designed temperature at which the clutch
operation kicks in? I'd like to compare that to specs on aftermarket
units to see if it might be worth my effort to consider replacing it.
Ron
|
1638.17 | ref. .12 Get a CAR fan setup... | BRAT::J_GALLAGHER | | Thu May 29 1997 12:58 | 28 |
| Ron,
There are different specs for different vehicles. The clutches are
spec'ed to operate within certain rpm ranges and be sensitive to
certain temperature ranges (cut-in/out). There's literally nothing
you can do about thick fluid in the Winter till the clutch loosens
up, and literally nothing you can do about hot restart when the clutch
thermo-spring has been exposed to a hot radiator and is mounted to a
hot (aka boiling) block. The fan's gonna run full tilt in either
situation, both of which are upon startup.
Quieter operation lately is probably due to the increasing warmness of
ambient temps (the warm months).
I'd go for a heavy duty setup (clutch and fan) off a full sized CAR
with all the toys, like a RWD Chev Caprice... it should be a direct 4
bolt exchange and run one helluva lot quieter.
Although they've come a looooong way in the last 7-8 years,
quiet simply isn't as important as heavy duty is with truck drivelines.
A boneyard will actually remove the assembly along with bolts spacers
etc. FOR you so that all you have to do is go get it over the counter
at something like 1/4 what a new one would cost.
Good hunting.
John
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