fuse for fan blows?...
#1
Member
JOURNEYMAN
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Newcomerstown, OH
Posts: 33
fuse for fan blows?...
I just hooked up a powermaster alt. 60/100amp. I have it wired direct to the battery master disconnect. Is this right?
I have ran the original 37 amp alt. for 2 years with no problems with blowing fuses. I have dual electric fans from some unknown car, they work great. I have the wired with a relay and a 30amp fuse on the ground wire. What would cause this fuse to blow?? No shorts in the wire, I traced them and all looks good. Are the fans just getting worn out?? I am trying to tune in the timing on my motor, could being too far advanced put a strain on the electrical system?? I have an old MSD-7a with fixed curve timing computer, MSD billet locked out dist. I am also running a holley blue pump. any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Travis
I have ran the original 37 amp alt. for 2 years with no problems with blowing fuses. I have dual electric fans from some unknown car, they work great. I have the wired with a relay and a 30amp fuse on the ground wire. What would cause this fuse to blow?? No shorts in the wire, I traced them and all looks good. Are the fans just getting worn out?? I am trying to tune in the timing on my motor, could being too far advanced put a strain on the electrical system?? I have an old MSD-7a with fixed curve timing computer, MSD billet locked out dist. I am also running a holley blue pump. any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Travis
#2
Junior Member
SHOW GUEST
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 3
fuse for fan blows
The fuse should be on the +(bat) side. It might not fix your current fan supply problem. But it will prevent wiring melt down. The higher amp alt. might be the thing that is the problem. Recheck all wiring routing and connections. If all else fails, start with the basics.
#3
Senior Member
RACING JUNKIE
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Independence, Missouri
Posts: 1,181
Travis, I'll bet if you put your 37 amp alternator back in your car, it will quit blowing that fuse. Reason I think that, is your old alt. was probably marginal, in its ability too keep up with the amp draw on it. Your new hopped up electrical system now has more amps to draw from. I think your duel fans probably draw more than 30 amps, blowing the fuse. If you don't want to try a bigger fuse, you can protect the circuit with a fusable link. Most high amp circuits on an automobile are protected by fusable links, (starters, fans, Headlights, etc.) They are just getting more amps with the bigger alt. cause there are more available to draw from. Bet your fans spin faster, and your headlights are brighter too,with the bigger alt.
Hope this helps, good luck
Hope this helps, good luck
#4
Senior Member
EXPERT BUILDER
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: spring creek nv.
Posts: 329
you need to run one 30 amp relay for each fan and put the fuse between the power supply for relay and relay.should do same on fuse.have each fan relay have it's own fuse[30 amp]another thing is once you do your fans this way and you blow one one fan fuse then that fan could be getting weak and causing more amp draw causing fuse to blow..fans do go bad in time..if they start blowing fuses then that is a good sign that fan is bad..the bigger alternator will have no effect on fuses blowing.on some street cars i've built for myself and others i've gone frome stock 30 amp alternators too 110 amp alternators and never blowed any fuses..alternator only charges the battery..