07-28-2013, 12:11 PM | #1 |
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fan wiring - diode
I tried wiring in my trinary switch yesterday. Now my primary fan no longer works at all haha. After thinking about it I think the diode may be preventing the current from returning to ground at pin C1-42. I'm just concerned about wiring the trinary ground straight to pin 85 of the relay along with the pcm wire. I don't won't to mess up my PCM! How should I wire this in without adding another relay?!?!?
Posted via Mobile Device Last edited by cjohnson6772; 07-28-2013 at 12:21 PM. |
07-28-2013, 12:30 PM | #2 |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
I don't think removing the diode would hurt anything. You're just grounding it before the PCM, but if you want to leave it, try turning the diode around.
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07-28-2013, 02:48 PM | #3 |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
You are correct that you don't want to connect the trinary switch directly to the relay along with the PCM control for the fan. The diode is backwards in the diagram above. In addition, your PCM will eventually throw a code about the fan control circuitry because it uses the relay coil as a pull-up resistor to 12V. To defeat that check, you can add a resistor to 12V between the diode and the PCM. I updated your diagram to show what I'm talking about. Changes are in red.
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07-28-2013, 05:46 PM | #4 |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
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First off I think I'm going to change to pin 33 on C2 to turn on my second fan since my first fan already stays on most of the time anyways. Also, could I just wire the diode and resistor in parallel instead of adding another ign wire? If my thinking is correct, this should be the same since the pcm would always see the 12V from pin 86 on the relay passing through the 1kOhm resistor. If I did leave the diode and resistor out all together, would it actually damage the pcm or just throw the code? |
07-28-2013, 06:41 PM | #5 | |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
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07-28-2013, 06:47 PM | #6 | |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
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Under normal circumstances, the control line is held at a logic high because the relay coil acts as a pull-up resistor on the control line. If you add a trinary switch to the PCM's control line, and the switch closes, the trinary switch will ground the control line. The PCM doesn't know anything about the trinary switch and sees this as a problem. Then it throws a code (P0480, I think). To answer your first question, the resistor and diode in parallel would not work. The diode, when oriented correctly, is there to stop the trinary switch from sending ground back to the PCM. A resistor in parallel would defeat that because it would provide a current path around the diode. In addition, the resistor would drop the voltage low enough that that the PCM probably couldn't even turn on the fan anymore. For your second question, if you leave them both out, you'll get a code but it shouldn't damage the PCM. The real problem in all this is that when the PCM throws the code, it defaults to the fans always being on until the fault is cleared. So, your fans will always run with the ignition on after you get the code. |
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07-28-2013, 08:28 PM | #7 |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
Just came back in the house and saw the last two responses. Thanks guys! I have connected the trinary straight to pin 85 for the secondary fan relay. I will likely add another relay or diode/resistor in the coming weeks, but I just needed to get something wired up to have my a/c guy charge it this week. To be honest I doubt that I should ever see the high pressure before both fans are running anyways. I'm running a 195 t-stat and the first fan kicks on at 200 and the second fan kicks on at 210. I figure I would see 210 before I would see high a/c pressure since my condenser is basically the same cross section as my radiator. Anyways, I would have never thought about wiring in the other resistor (I guess I don't really understand "pull up resistors"), but I will add it when I have more time to run the extra hot wire.
Thanks again guys. |
07-28-2013, 09:31 PM | #8 | |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
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07-28-2013, 09:38 PM | #9 | |
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Re: fan wiring - diode
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