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Old May 27, 2009 | 10:09 AM
  #1  
King Klong's Avatar
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Anyone ever hard wired their fan to a switch? I ride in a hot area, and it would be nice to just cut the fan on whenever I know it will be needed.
 
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Old May 27, 2009 | 05:20 PM
  #2  
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Seen it done of F3s, but I really don't recommend it. If you're running hot because of idling through traffic, that means that your charging system will be put under additional strain from running the fan excessively.
 
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Old May 27, 2009 | 05:29 PM
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your bike will know when to turn the fan on seems a bit silly wanting to put it on a manual switch what happens if you forget to turn it on you get cooked motor
 
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Old May 27, 2009 | 05:43 PM
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Originally Posted by nutter
your bike will know when to turn the fan on seems a bit silly wanting to put it on a manual switch what happens if you forget to turn it on you get cooked motor
Yea thats a very good point, you may not think you would forget but maybe you had a bad day and just sitting in traffic and you look down and your motor is 300*. Id say just leave it stock, when it gets hot it kicks on..
 
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Old May 28, 2009 | 06:57 AM
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I think I'd just jump the sensor coming out of your radiator with the switch, no need to mess with hot wires that way.

That being said, I wouldn't do it because I don't see the advantage of you doing it over the switch doing it. I live in the middle of a lot of traffic and it is annoying after a few lights it's always on but hey, keeps the engine alive.
 
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Old Jun 16, 2009 | 07:15 PM
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my original fan blew, so i hooked up a 12 fan to it to a toggle and let me tell ya. it sucks. first u have to drill a hole somewhere for the toggle. then u got more wires running around. plus like someone else said u dont wanna forget to turn it on, the temps jump up quick esp when uve been riding. so now i just ride without a fan. i stay outta traffic which isnt hard to do since i live int he sticks, alotta 50-55mph country roads and keep an eye on it. if i start getting hot, i just pull over and have a butt. my advice tho, keep it stock. its a perfect design
 
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Old Jun 17, 2009 | 09:04 AM
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I did it. I have it wired so when the toggle is off, it relies on the temperature relay to activate the fan (like normal). Turning the switch on just forces the fan on. I did it because I love riding at night, and up where I am it often gets down into the 40's. I throw the fan on to blow the heat back at myself and warm up a bit. Sounds hilarious, but man, its NICE when your legs are going numb.

Sounds like you're doing it to DISABLE the fan at certain times. I wouldn't reccomend that AT ALL. You'd be amazed how fast these engins can overheat while idling. Be happy you at least have a liquid-cooled bike, and not one of those massive air-cooled engines on the cruisers. Those things make you feel like you're in the bowels of hell, just sitting at a traffic light.
 
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Old Jun 18, 2009 | 07:07 AM
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i wouldn't do it to disable the fan. i would want it how you have it, if i were to do it johnnyx. i was considering doing it because i know when my fan is going to come on meaning i know when i am going to have to sit at a lite for a long time, or ride at less than 35 for a long distance. i'd like to turn it on before it reaches that 212 mark.
 
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Old Jun 18, 2009 | 11:11 AM
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212 is the optimal engine temprature, IIRC. The fan shouldn't be on before that, anyway.

But, to answer your question:



You just need some wire and a 3-pole, 2-position switch. Wire Position 1 as FUSE > SWITCH > TEMP. RELAY, and Position 2 as FUSE > SWITCH > FAN.

Pos 1 is normal, "stock" functionality, allowing the bike to regulate the fan on its own

Pos 2 forces the fan on, no matter what.
 

Last edited by johnnyx; Jun 18, 2009 at 11:13 AM.
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