Matt Bacon Posted yesterday at 06:17 PM Posted yesterday at 06:17 PM Triggered by building a '68 Camaro with a 302.... why is the cooling fan "3-blades-gap-2-blades-gap"? Does it do something to balance the engine? Or provide a cycle of a bit more and then a bit less cooling? The kit parts are clearly a replica of the real thing, rather than just short-shot, so I'd love to know what the engineering reason for it is... I think I've only ever seen it on this Camaro and a Corvette. Everything else I've built has had evenly-distributed blades (admittedly with anything between 4 and 12 of them...) which I assume makes for smoother operation and consistent stress/wear on the bearings... best, M.
webestang Posted yesterday at 06:22 PM Posted yesterday at 06:22 PM I think it has to do with noise reduction. 3 1
Mark Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago 2X on noise reduction. I once had a pair of snow tires that had an uneven tread pattern, likewise for noise reduction. Radial snows might have been quieter, but these were bias-ply, bought as radial tires were just ramping up in popularity here.
Matt Bacon Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago I can believe it… but does an asymmetric fan really make that much difference to the “noise” when it’s hanging off the front of a 302ci VB with an exhaust system that is consciously not working hard to hush up the “thrumble” as you wind it up? I would have thought too that a bit of fine tuning of the shape of the fan cowl and the distance between the fan and back face of the radiator would have solved any resonance issues as quickly as chopping a couple of blades out of the fan… best, M.
Rodent Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago 52 minutes ago, Matt Bacon said: I can believe it… but does an asymmetric fan really make that much difference to the “noise” when it’s hanging off the front of a 302ci VB with an exhaust system that is consciously not working hard to hush up the “thrumble” as you wind it up? I would have thought too that a bit of fine tuning of the shape of the fan cowl and the distance between the fan and back face of the radiator would have solved any resonance issues as quickly as chopping a couple of blades out of the fan… best, M. I was thinking the same thing. I don't know if you have ever heard a solid lifter American smallblock run, but I would think that fan noise would be about the last thing they would be worried about (unless it wasn't noise but harmonics). 1
Fat Brian Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago I've seen that same style of fan in other Chevy kits with other engines, it was probably just an off the shelf part for the time that got installed on most vehicles.
Ace-Garageguy Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago Evenly spaced blades can actually get to howl like an air raid siren in extreme cases. 2 3
Quiet Eric Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 1 hour ago, Matt Bacon said: I can believe it… but does an asymmetric fan really make that much difference to the “noise” when it’s hanging off the front of a 302ci VB with an exhaust system that is consciously not working hard to hush up the “thrumble” as you wind it up? I would have thought too that a bit of fine tuning of the shape of the fan cowl and the distance between the fan and back face of the radiator would have solved any resonance issues as quickly as chopping a couple of blades out of the fan… best, M. The fan on the front of a Z28 was the same fan on any other V8 camaro. And the noise from an evenly space fan blade on the highway with an engine at 3500rpm...is very obnoxious. So finding a fix for that was pretty important to many drivers. They also did not remove any blades from the fan, they are just clocked a little differently and done so in a way that the fan is still balanced. 2
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