Thanks for your thoughts guys.
Geoff, it would seem from reading my first post that I
must have bypassed the sensor, but I haven't. Not by any of the connections that I have made anyway. But perhaps it is effectively bypassed because, despite being brand new and unused, it is faulty...
The sensor, as I understand it, works like this: One wire, connected to a body earth, goes into the sensor. There is a thermostatic switch inside the sensor which, when it is activated by the water temperature reaching a certain point, makes a connection from the aforementioned earthed wire to the second wire coming out of the sensor. This wire connects to the relay and causes the relay to switch on the power to the fan. Correct or not?
The sensor has three wires, as you described. The shortest one does indeed connect to an earthing ring round the sensor. What does it do though? In my description above it isn't needed, is it? It certainly doesn't alter the way my fan works whether it is connected or not...
I do have a multimeter and can understand the basic tests of establishing voltage and continuity. The earthing tab washer that fits around the sensor does make a continuity connection to the radiator body, but the radiator body isn't connected to earth of course. The sensor wire that connects to the body earth
isn't connected to the wire which connects to the earth tab as you suggested Geoff, it's connected to the wire which goes to the relay. This, I assume, should only connect when the thermoswitch is activated by the water temperature. On my new switch it is connected all the time. Is this wrong? Have I purchased a dodgy sensor? Saying that, I kept the old sensor... and it's wires are connected to each other in the same way... but perhaps
that sensor really
is broken...
The wire which comes out of the
relay to connect to the sensor is registering 12 volts. Is this correct?
I have tried wiring the sensor up in every permutation possible with the three wires but it makes no difference- it's either on permanently or doesn't work at all. And anyway there is really only one way to wire it as it uses a combination of certain wire lengths and connector types that only allow one way of connecting it.
Neil, the damaged wiring was only part of the old sensor- the one wire still in use is the wire that runs from the relay to the sensor and this is perfect. I bypassed it anyway with a new wire just to check and the fan operation remained the same.
Peter, the fan on this car, when it was functioning correctly,
did run on after the ignition was turned off. Perhaps the later cars
are indeed different.
The answer to both of your questions is Yes.
Any more comments/help very gratefully received. My thinking at this moment is the new sensor is suspect...
Andrew.