Thank you all for the help with this.
To answer some of the questions:
- Running the fan all the time while on the highway with an ambient temperature of around 85 degrees F, yields a coolant temperature of ~188 F, just shy of 190 F. This is somewhat perplexing as I always thought the fan being on would hinder airflow.
- Water pump along with every piece of the cooling system is new with less than 3k miles. All BMW factory parts, except the water pump which is an all metal higher flow Stewart/EMP unit.
- All factory shrouds are in place. The only difference is that I have an aftermarket under tray, it does have a deflector to route air towards the radiator.
- The fan is about 5/8-3/4" away from the radiator and the fan motor is 1/8" away from the engine, so there is no way it can move further away from the radiator. You can see the fan motor to the right and the water pump pulley nuts on the left. This is the reason I machined off the water pump clutch fan snout, the aftermarket one would not fit otherwise as I went with a bigger unit than is usually used on these cars.
Yesterday in the afternoon is was quite warm, 85 F and I did some data-loging. Of course the car makes me look like an idiot and work as it should.
The temperature data is being pulled from the factory sensor at the head and not the aftermarket one, but I never saw the aftermarket gauge go to 220 either. I have a ton of engine parameters, anything else you would like to see on the chart, please ask.
I will not be able to drive the car for a couple of weeks, but I will do some more dataloging once I can put some miles in it.
adam525i said:
1 - Get rid of the extra shrouding on the back of the rad that was directing air through the old mechanical fan, that is only hurting airflow through the rad at higher speeds now.
2. Add another fan switch into the head by your temp sensors wired in parallel with the switches located in the outlet side of the rad. You'd want the temp of this second switch around 210F (or wherever you think the thing should run at). The low temp switches in the outlet of the rad will take care of the slow speed stuff and the high temp switch in the head will help you with the problem you are having getting some extra air through the rad at high speeds.
Number 2, I guess, was my original question. I can trigger the fan with the aftermarket switch. My gauge has an option to ground the relay and I can set the temperature to whatever I want.
I agree with everyone that the way to go is the factory clutched fan, but I really think that this set-up has been used countless of times on this platform and has to work. I am doing something wrong.
What I want to do now is experiment with a different trigger setting on the fan for high speed and play with the factory shroud. I thought the factory shroud was needed, but many of you have suggested removing it.