
I need to know where the thermo switch is......on the side of the radiator ?
Duncan
Moderators: Doone, westonwarrior
Yes very hard to get a photo. Here is my attempt.Vanmanerik wrote:I had a look around the engine compartment today, tried to take some photos of the thermostat housing and circuits coming off it but no good they were not usable . It looks like one is just a bypass circuit, another is a cooling circuit for the turbo-charger, and the other for the cab heaters.
I think the word 'strange' is being used lightheartedly. However, just as with any system (motorways, Wide Area Networks), the more 'nodes' it has, the more difficult to diagnose the precise cause of a malfunction tends to become. In such cases, consumers have been known to find the behaviour of the system 'strange'. The Bongo could possibly qualify as have a number of nodes (i.e. interchanges across the cooling system)I do not understand why some members consider the Bongo cooling system to be "Strange", it's not that much different to a lot of modern systems. It's simply a case that the engine is situated behind the main bulkhead and requires some complicated pipework to connect to the
radiator and the additional cab heating and cooling systems, which are
not normally fitted to less well equiped vehicles.
Where is the thermoswitch to switch on the electric fan???....on many cars its on the radiator.... which would be interesting !! I suspect it is on the engine block in this case as it shouldn't go on if the radiator is cold.Dannyboy wrote:Mobyfix, I've just picked up on your question about the electric fan. The fan does not go on with the holey thermostat or no thermostat. There are no overheating problems like this because presumably there is a good flow of coolant through the radiator and the engine is cooled effectively. In fact the engine probably runs below its optimum temperature as there is no reading on the temperature guage.
If a properly functioning thermostat without additional holes is fitted however, the thermostat appears not to open as the lower radiator hose stays cold. The engine then starts to overheat to the extent that the electric fan comes on to cool the coolant in the radiator, but as the coolant is not flowing through the radiator this will not help cool the engine. It is time to switch off and nurse the bongo home to try again.
Hope this makes sense.