Anyone on here have experience with this unit? It's an "eddy current" drive on low speed and then it locks up like a regular fan clutch when needed for additional cooling. My question is: Does this fan drive ever shut completely off when not needed for cooling the engine or A/C system? Or, when the engine is running does it operate continuously on the eddy drive, locking into high speed only when needed?
Horton DM 2 speed fan drive
Discussion in 'Peterbilt Forum' started by pupeperson, Sep 25, 2013.
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You may have the wrong solinoid
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They never shut off fully, their is nothing to deactivate the magnets.
pupeperson Thanks this. -
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Be careful if you rebuild that clutch, those magnets are pretty stout. Gave me a heck of a blood blister when they snapped together with my finger between them. Keep them away from each other. I've never seen a clutchless one that relied totally on magnets to turn the fan. I've seen the Warner electric hubs, but they were like an A/C compressor clutch, an electric magnet engaged the clutch. I've only seen them on medium duty engines.
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It was a Facet brand fan drive. There was no mechanical connection other than the bearings on a common shaft between the fan and the hub assembly. There was an electromagnet that when engaged caused the fan to spin at the speed of the shaft on which it was mounted. Engagement was gentle in comparison with a clutched drive like a Horton, with no violent torque spikes. I had several of them on early Detroit Series 60's in Freightliners. They weren't modulated to operate at varying speeds, just off and on. I was really happy with them. No failures at all.
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