If you jump the fan switch terminals, the power is still cut off with the key, so no worries about running the battery down. Unless of course you leave the key on, in which case it's "Something stupid, no sympathy!"

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Canada* but I'll take a look for aftermarket fans that are better, thank you I never thought of that good idea.Evilchicken0 wrote:The engine itself doesn't overheat so it should be fine. All the Yamahas I've had do this the coolant seems to get impossibly hot until the thermostat opens. As you're in the states you could have a look for a Muzzy fan, they're alloy and the blades are bigger shifting more air, I've got one on my Bimota.
is there a way to know which fan blade will fit the FZR's fan?Evilchicken0 wrote:The engine itself doesn't overheat so it should be fine. All the Yamahas I've had do this the coolant seems to get impossibly hot until the thermostat opens. As you're in the states you could have a look for a Muzzy fan, they're alloy and the blades are bigger shifting more air, I've got one on my Bimota.
I checked and it was about 5cm down from the top of the fill up cap so it should have been fine, i will most likely end up getting the Muzzy Cooling fan but only if someone can confirm it will fit my 400 fan motor. Meaning that blades will fit casing (not to long), and if holes dont line up I can always make an adapter piece.TomcatMJ wrote:Another often overseen reason for overheating is too few coolant in the reservoir-tank or a blocked hose from the reservoir-tank to the radiator-cap...did you check theese two things before looking for other error-sources?
I was bored last night, so I decided to look at this. I have in fact come up with a circuit that will plug into the temp sender and jumper out the stock thermo switch. An adjusting pot in the circuit box will allow you to turn on the fan between 80-120C - way too hot to way too cool, but that's up to you to determine. I realised at lunch time I need to tweak the circuit to include some deadband (the stock switch comes on at 105, shuts off at 98 - 7 degrees of deadband) to prevent rapid cycling on/off, but that shouldn't be too hard.snydes wrote:Quick simple question, is there any way to adjust when the cooling fan comes on? This bike gets extremely hot quick and the fan only turns on about 3mm-5mm from the red line of temperature.
At the moment I don't feel like doing a lot to the bike as I just got it fully working but maybe eventually i might, but that's also if I don't get the fan i mentioned above because if it cools faster that's perfectDonTZ125 wrote:I was bored last night, so I decided to look at this. I have in fact come up with a circuit that will plug into the temp sender and jumper out the stock thermo switch. An adjusting pot in the circuit box will allow you to turn on the fan between 80-120C - way too hot to way too cool, but that's up to you to determine. I realised at lunch time I need to tweak the circuit to include some deadband (the stock switch comes on at 105, shuts off at 98 - 7 degrees of deadband) to prevent rapid cycling on/off, but that shouldn't be too hard.snydes wrote:Quick simple question, is there any way to adjust when the cooling fan comes on? This bike gets extremely hot quick and the fan only turns on about 3mm-5mm from the red line of temperature.
Everything will be plug'n'play, with mating connectors. I'm thinking price would be ~US$40. Is this something folks might be interested in?