Proform brushless cooling fans?
#61
I ordered a flexalite 236 which is a 16” non brushless fan, costs $120 and is rated at 2660cfm (vs 3400 for the preform brushless I have that I’m having problems with).
then there’s a flexalite 238 which is 16”, rated at 3000cfm and is about $190. It’s non brushless too. I’m trying the 2660cfm one first. It pulls less amps. The pro form is 20 something amps and my voltage at idle (with the 12” already running) is 13.2v, when the 16” come on, it drops to 12.7v. It does have soft start so I see it slowly drop until the fan levels off and then it ends up at 12.7v.
#62
10 Second Club
iTrader: (2)
I'd make your own shroud. Cheaper and you can make sure it fits the way you want with your combo. Mine came with the procharger kit when I originally bought it. I modified the shroud which put the fans closer to the radiator, but the reason was to create room to run a larger crank pulley.
#63
I'd make your own shroud. Cheaper and you can make sure it fits the way you want with your combo. Mine came with the procharger kit when I originally bought it. I modified the shroud which put the fans closer to the radiator, but the reason was to create room to run a larger crank pulley.
#64
10 Second Club
iTrader: (2)
Yep I saw those posts that is why I knew you were capable of making your own shroud. I meant even if you bought the spal that procharger uses on their kits you should make a custom shroud for that fan if needed rather than use the one they make.
#65
yea, I’ve been needing fans for about three years now. I’ve had the sheet metal to do it before I even needed them. Just didn’t feel like doing it and I thought the only thing worth buying, fans wise, was the delta pag. They would cost me around a grand and I just wasn’t willing to spend that. Seeing the shroud you posted probably would have prompted me to do it sooner, because of the building of it. Just did have the time or drive to do it. I probably would have just bought that one and tried fans until I found some that get the job done. What I ended up doing is probably better anyways. I have a 16” and a 12” instead of 16” and 8”. My 12” fan almost does the job by itself, 2100cfm.
#66
Well I got the flex lite in. It does not blow near the air that the proform does. It’s lucky if it’s HALF the airflow and does not suck through a radiator with authority like the proform does. I was still going to install it except that it’s about an inch bigger in diameter. It’s a lot quieter tho. The proform is so powerful that it sounds scary. Like it’s gonna suck your fingers in there. The flexalite is ho hum.
#71
they sell a separate controller that will vary the speed if you desire. They are also soft start. Doesn’t really defeat the whole purpose of a brushless setup.
me having been into RC vehicles and into brushless technology, I can tell you with certainty that the main benefit is far more power output while using less amps and a motor that essentially never wears out, there’s no brushes to wear and the motor doesn’t get weaker over time like a brushed motor does.
and get this: the controller is like $43!
https://www.proformparts.com/product...fan-controller
edit: I see where it’s a manual controller. But the fans are pwm capable when using the third wire.
me having been into RC vehicles and into brushless technology, I can tell you with certainty that the main benefit is far more power output while using less amps and a motor that essentially never wears out, there’s no brushes to wear and the motor doesn’t get weaker over time like a brushed motor does.
and get this: the controller is like $43!
https://www.proformparts.com/product...fan-controller
edit: I see where it’s a manual controller. But the fans are pwm capable when using the third wire.
I also do find they get weaker as the heat weakens the magnets. Since these are fans I’d be worried about heat soak from the rad and engine.
#72
I run the derale dual fan kits (they use SPAL fans)with shroud and a Flexalite variable speed controller with soft start. No issues keeping a 5.3 turbo with front crossover cool. I also run a LS flowkooler pump and doesn’t get over 187*F in 90+ hot humid days. The variable speed controller can handle 60 continuous amps and its solid state with adjustable temp and comes with screw in probe or rad probe. U can control it with ground or positive triggers if u don’t want to run the variable speed. If u use the ECM ground triggers it’s still soft start but goes to 60% on low and high is 100%. Built into the controller is a 30s cool down after key off and on startup it doesn’t kick on for like 15s so you don’t drain the battery while cranking. It’s my go two and run it on two LS swaps no issues.
#73
I run the derale dual fan kits (they use SPAL fans)with shroud and a Flexalite variable speed controller with soft start. No issues keeping a 5.3 turbo with front crossover cool. I also run a LS flowkooler pump and doesn’t get over 187*F in 90+ hot humid days. The variable speed controller can handle 60 continuous amps and its solid state with adjustable temp and comes with screw in probe or rad probe. U can control it with ground or positive triggers if u don’t want to run the variable speed. If u use the ECM ground triggers it’s still soft start but goes to 60% on low and high is 100%. Built into the controller is a 30s cool down after key off and on startup it doesn’t kick on for like 15s so you don’t drain the battery while cranking. It’s my go two and run it on two LS swaps no issues.
I was reading about water pumps the other day and read where the consensus was flow cooler pumps were not good or reliable. I do feel like I need a little more water flow because if I raise the rpm at idle some, the temp will come down a couple to a few degrees. My theory is:
1) I have an underdrive pulley on the crank
2) my idle rpm isn’t much higher than stock because the cam I have isn’t big so it doesn’t need to idle higher
3) I have a bigger capacity aluminum radiator and maybe the original 2004 stock pump just doesn’t flow enough plus the two reasons above
#74
I was reading about water pumps the other day and read where the consensus was flow cooler pumps were not good or reliable. I do feel like I need a little more water flow because if I raise the rpm at idle some, the temp will come down a couple to a few degrees. My theory is:
1) I have an underdrive pulley on the crank
2) my idle rpm isn’t much higher than stock because the cam I have isn’t big so it doesn’t need to idle higher
3) I have a bigger capacity aluminum radiator and maybe the original 2004 stock pump just doesn’t flow enough plus the two reasons above
1) I have an underdrive pulley on the crank
2) my idle rpm isn’t much higher than stock because the cam I have isn’t big so it doesn’t need to idle higher
3) I have a bigger capacity aluminum radiator and maybe the original 2004 stock pump just doesn’t flow enough plus the two reasons above
idk why they aren’t. Mine is prob 7+ years old. It comes with a billet impeller that supposedly doubles flow at idle and low but doesn’t cavitate at higher rpm’s like stock. Mine has been problem free and the turbo 5.3 runs cooler than the 5.3 in the vette which has a large 2 core rad and brand new LS3 Camaro waterpump with aftermarket 160 Tstat. That engine at idle the temp increases to 198-199 at idle and as soon as it give it rpm the temps drop to high 180s. The 5.3 turbo with flowkooler pump idles the same temp and doesn’t increase while sitting still. That also has a big afco racing 31x19 two core rad and 160 Tstat. My experience has been the opposite. The racing world says push as much water as you can as fast as you can to lower the delta T in the system. A larger rad provides more fluid but more surface area and max out the airflow. It has worked for me!
5.3 turbo is 700-750 rpm idle
5.3 ls3 pump 600-650 rpm idle
underdrives do no good at all except maybe save the alternator if your spinning dumb high.
#75
idk why they aren’t. Mine is prob 7+ years old. It comes with a billet impeller that supposedly doubles flow at idle and low but doesn’t cavitate at higher rpm’s like stock. Mine has been problem free and the turbo 5.3 runs cooler than the 5.3 in the vette which has a large 2 core rad and brand new LS3 Camaro waterpump with aftermarket 160 Tstat. That engine at idle the temp increases to 198-199 at idle and as soon as it give it rpm the temps drop to high 180s. The 5.3 turbo with flowkooler pump idles the same temp and doesn’t increase while sitting still. That also has a big afco racing 31x19 two core rad and 160 Tstat. My experience has been the opposite. The racing world says push as much water as you can as fast as you can to lower the delta T in the system. A larger rad provides more fluid but more surface area and max out the airflow. It has worked for me!
5.3 turbo is 700-750 rpm idle
5.3 ls3 pump 600-650 rpm idle
underdrives do no good at all except maybe save the alternator if your spinning dumb high.
5.3 turbo is 700-750 rpm idle
5.3 ls3 pump 600-650 rpm idle
underdrives do no good at all except maybe save the alternator if your spinning dumb high.
I don’t really WANT the underdrive but I have no choice because my drain line is in the front cover and the stock pulley would hit my drain line.
#76
I wasnt sure where to put this as I didn't see a cooling section..... feel free to move it if i missed it.....
Being I'm turboed, i've been running into "overheating" problems down here in the south during the summer. I say "overheating" because it runs warmer than I like, I've seen 220ish.... not cool. No pun intended.
I Built an aluminum shroud to house the fans, but I wasnt sure what route I wanted to take. I know I want brushless fans but the only thing I saw that looked good was the Deltapag fans, but it would cost me a grand or more for two fans. I don't have that kind of extra cash for those so I was thinking about buying one flex a lite 238 (16" 3000cfm $169) and a deltapag 12" with controller (2100cfm $469 yikes). I accidently came across the Proform brushless fans, but they are too new to find any feedback or reviews on them. Just wondering if any of you guys have tried them yet, Or am I gonna be the guinea pig?
https://www.proformparts.com/brushless
Being I'm turboed, i've been running into "overheating" problems down here in the south during the summer. I say "overheating" because it runs warmer than I like, I've seen 220ish.... not cool. No pun intended.
I Built an aluminum shroud to house the fans, but I wasnt sure what route I wanted to take. I know I want brushless fans but the only thing I saw that looked good was the Deltapag fans, but it would cost me a grand or more for two fans. I don't have that kind of extra cash for those so I was thinking about buying one flex a lite 238 (16" 3000cfm $169) and a deltapag 12" with controller (2100cfm $469 yikes). I accidently came across the Proform brushless fans, but they are too new to find any feedback or reviews on them. Just wondering if any of you guys have tried them yet, Or am I gonna be the guinea pig?
https://www.proformparts.com/brushless
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
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#77
Hey Kfxguy,
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
#78
TECH Resident
iTrader: (3)
Hey Kfxguy,
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
#79
Last edited by DeltaPAG; 07-02-2024 at 09:22 AM.
The following users liked this post:
The BallSS (07-02-2024)
#80
TECH Addict
iTrader: (9)
Hey Kfxguy,
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
Please note the DeltaPAG $469 price tag includes a digital temp/speed controller, dual 70amp panasonic waterproof relay/fuse module, sensor & 3ft waterproof wire harness and the fan & ECM. It's really an amazing deal considering what you're getting. Also, you only need one controller to operate multiple fans so the second fan would be $100 cheaper. Yeah, brushless fans and variable speed is like french fries and ketchup... there's no point of one without the other.
The fan leads look nice and thick which makes me happy having melted wires with the Derale fans lol.