aubierules
New member
:agree: we have it in south alabama too!!!We get that nasty humidity here too and it's very corrosive on ME - I HATE IT
:agree: we have it in south alabama too!!!We get that nasty humidity here too and it's very corrosive on ME - I HATE IT
:agree::agree:Humidity only affects ones ability to cool with sweat, don't think it has anything to do with Spyder's cooling. Only condensed humidity can corrode, not when its still in gaseous form. IMO
:agree:You guys :dontknow:. Ride a Valkyrie for a while... the large radiator fan blows straight back and under the seat... in addition to heating your legs, other things get warm. That's what you call hot. Same with an ST-1300.
Reminds me of a Christmas song: "... chestnuts roasting o're an open firrrrrrrrrrrre.....".hyea: Did you notice how nice that sounded? On tune... not sharp or flat.
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use a product by deep purple, it goes in your radiator and lowers temp. by up to 20 deg. i use it and it lowered mine by 14deg.
ya the product royal purple will tell you to take out the antifreeze and replace it with water and there product. I know from experience that it works.... i tried a nuther product because it was in stock and it did ok, but not as well as the royal purple did, so i drained it and swiched.... try it it works....:spyder2::spyder2::chat:
I had a situation last weekend where the air temp reached only 87 degrees- Rode down the HW and then got stopped in a 20 min line of stop and go. The engine temp slowly increased sitting there, idling until I got a warning light and "limp mode" engaged. I was able to get it into a parking lot under cover and in about 5 minutes, it was fine. I know the Spyder likes it hot but would an aftermarket oil cooler help? What are others doing in addition to what is discussed above? It would seem that the extensive cowlings reduce aire flow around the engine and when running and not moving in warm weather, it just cranks up...
I had a situation last weekend where the air temp reached only 87 degrees- Rode down the HW and then got stopped in a 20 min line of stop and go. The engine temp slowly increased sitting there, idling until I got a warning light and "limp mode" engaged. I was able to get it into a parking lot under cover and in about 5 minutes, it was fine. I know the Spyder likes it hot but would an aftermarket oil cooler help? What are others doing in addition to what is discussed above? It would seem that the extensive cowlings reduce aire flow around the engine and when running and not moving in warm weather, it just cranks up...
-Scotty1.) What about adding Water Wetter to the radiator?
No experience with this, but I doubt it would help all that much.
2.) Can the thermostat be changed out to turn the fan on at a lower temp?
The thermostat doesn't control the fan, the ECM (computer) does. It would be nice if BRP would provide a programming change.
3.) Is the fan relay getting hot and shorting it out and does changing this relay out actually help in the long run?
If your fan is running, the relay is not the problem. If the fan isn't running, it is a possible cause.
4.) What about a fan override switch for manual control when these situations occur and the temp is hot outside or your stuck in stop and go traffic?
There was talk of this in another thread recently, but it sounds trickier than it seems. Haven't heard yet if anyone has actually found a viable solution.
This appears that it should work. The fan is switched via the 12V side, although the relay coil is switch via the ground. I doubt from the diagram whether you would have any difficulty providing a secondary power source if, but if there are doubts, I'd tap off the fan fuse for power, even at the relay itself, truly paralleling the relay with your switch. BTW, make sure the switch is sufficiently rated. Let us know how this works out.My project for this upcomming week is to work on a manual switch override for the fan. My plan is to run a 15A fused 12 volt line through a switch right to the 12 volt power line going to the fan. I plan on tapping into the fan 12 volt power line AFTER the relay thus in essence having the manual switch running in parallel to the relay.
This appears that it should work. The fan is switched via the 12V side, although the relay coil is switch via the ground. I doubt from the diagram whether you would have any difficulty providing a secondary power source if, but if there are doubts, I'd tap off the fan fuse for power, even at the relay itself, truly paralleling the relay with your switch. BTW, make sure the switch is sufficiently rated. Let us know how this works out.
-Scotty![]()