chasingomas
Member
with the voltometer?Probe the black wire on the harness to any ground, listen for the beep.
with the voltometer?Probe the black wire on the harness to any ground, listen for the beep.
sadly no, I'm really lost at this point. How do I do that?When you turn the ac on, the fan still doesn’t come on? As others have said, your best bet is to datalog to see if the ecu is calling for the fan to turn on and what temp the temp sensor is telling the ecu.
You’ll either need an expensive scan tool or elm327 dongle and download Forscan. Once you have that we can walk you through what to do next.sadly no, I'm really lost at this point. How do I do that?
for sure. Going to buy a new multimeter (shake my head), test everything. Go from there. I have a mac so I think I'll have to buy a cheapo laptop to run forscan but I can do that. i'll feel like a civic tuner in fast and the furious. I'll update when the testing is done.You’ll either need an expensive scan tool or elm327 dongle and download Forscan. Once you have that we can walk you through what to do next.
i was so nervous. Thank you so much. I felt each video said to do a different thing. Your explanation was great.I recommend just doing a simple continuity test on the ground pin of the fan harness connector, whichever of them is colored black. You want the dial to the setting at 3 o'clock, the wifi looking symbol. One lead on the black pin of the fan connector (body harness side, not the fan itself) and the other lead on clean bare metal or any visible ground connection point such as the ones screwed into the upper radiator core support right behind the headlamps. The thing should beep if there is no break in that wire. Keep in mind that if you ever use this function for any reason, the test must always be done on an unpowered or de-energized circuit, as the multimeter sends out an electric charge of its own down one lead and expects to see it return on the other, hence the beep indicating continuity. Here, you're only doing it on a ground connection so it's generally safe regardless of the situation. If you ever put it on a normally-powered circuit (one which is fused), you must remove power from it or the entire car altogether, whichever is safer. If you don't follow this rule, you blow up the multimeter in some cases depending on how well it's designed and protected. The same goes for the ohm meter function which is one position above this diode checker function, the Omega symbol.
yes!by the way, it may say elsewhere in this thread, i know we are working on a 96-04 possibly new edge, but this is a mustang, correct?
where would I start bookwise? Tired of being scared lolelectrical scares most enthusiasts and honestly it probably should. There is some book knowledge that is helpful when you get into it and the of course knowing how to use a meter is a good portion of it as well.
learned 4 new ways to diagnose cooling issues! and it's over hahaGlad it's sorted out...that's all that counts and you got a bunch of experience along the way!!!!