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If I am only spinning my stock fan at 2000 rpm's, and it apparently moves 5000 CFM at 4000 rpm, then that means I am only moving ~2500 CFM.
A) The relationship between the Fan's RPM and it's airflow, especially given the restriction of the radiator and the AC condenser is NOT linear.
B) The relationship between your engine rpms and your fan rpms is not linear. Even at "Full Lockup" the fan clutch still "slips". So at 4000 RPM it will be slipping a lot more than at 2000 rpms.
So basically, if your stock fan is rated for 5000 CFM (At 4000 RPM as you say it is), then it's going to be more like 80% of that at 2000 rpms.... which is 3200 CFM....
Not to mention....
How much HP and torque are you making?
The GDE hot tune, at 2,000 rpms, the most you could be making would be like 360? 380? ft lbs?
HP = Torque @ rpm / 5252
so at 2000 RPM at 380 ft lbs is 145 HP.....
So if you had a GDE hot tune, and even if it took maximum engine torque to hold you at 2,000 rpms.... you only have to worry about cooling 145HP worth of heat.. at the VERY MOST...
And with 70 MPH worth of airflow over the radiator, I can't imagine you needing much additional "fan power" to keep your engine cool.
not to mention
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Based on what I have seen around here, the Hayden clutch engages at 170F air temps coming off the radiator, but seeing as I would now be running almost 30F hotter coolant temps then stock, is the fan clutch going to be engaged all of the time once the engine is up to temp?
Your running your engine 30F hotter than stock?
That would make your stock radiator and fan even MORE efficient....
That means there is a greater possible difference in temperature, and your radiator and fan can cool away even more BTU's given the same air flow.
In my experience, it's when you're pulling a lot of weight up big hills at like 40 MPH at like 3200 rpms for sustained periods of time that lack of fan flow starts to become an issue with these CRD's.....
That's when you find out if your stock fan clutch it working or not, etc.....
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An electric fan like the FFD3600 can move 3600 CFM regardless of the engine RPM
That's what they rate it for, yes, but will it do that in a restrictive environment like the front end of a liberty?
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Plus, my F150 ecoboost has electric fans and does just fine. That thing weighs 6500 lbs and has a GCWR of 17100 lbs and doesnt need a mechanical fan.
It's true, a lot of the newer vehicles, including trucks have switched to electric fans, But that F150 also has way more frontal area, and 2 electric fans.
Makes a big difference.
And they also run hotter thermostats from the factory, which makes their cooling systems more efficient given the same rad size / frontal area / fan CFM.
I believe it's 176 vs 188....
which may not seem like much, but it's the difference vs the ambient air...
so if it's 110 degrees out, the 188 degree ford gets 78 degrees of delta between the engine, the radiator and the ambient air
but if it's 110 degrees out, the 176 degree liberty only get 66 degrees of delta between the engine, the radiator and the ambient air
That means that all things being equal, the fords cooling system is 18% more efficient at dumping engine heat into the ambient air (with those numbers anyway )
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is the fan clutch going to be engaged all of the time once the engine is up to temp?
No, the fan clutch has no idea what temperature the water inside of the engine is, all it knows is how hot the air is inside that fan shroud.
As the air inside the fan shroud gets hotter, it "locks up" more, that's it.
The fact that the coolant entering the radiator is hotter will make no difference, because there will be less coolant traveling through the radiator.
(the reason your engine is 30 degrees hotter is because your thermostat will be more restrictive causing less water to flow, that's how thermostats work, they reach a temperature / flow equilibrium)
Think of it this way.
You got a bathtub and an electric water heating element.
If you stick the electric heating element in the bathtub, the bathtub heats to 80 degrees.
in an hour it's 80 degrees, in 5 hours it's 80 degrees.
The bath water is dissipating the heat at the same rate the electric heating element is heating it.
Now instead of putting that heating element directly in the bath water, you instead put it in a pot of water that you pull out of the bathtub.
let's say that every 1 minute you empty the pot into the bath tub, mix the water around, re fill the pot and stick the heating element back in.
If you wait 1 minute, maybe the water in the pot gets to 90 degrees before you switch it out.
if you wait 2 minutes, maybe the water in the pot gets to 120 degrees before you switch it out.
Either way, the bath water isn't going to get anywhere above the original 80 degrees that you got by sticking the heating element directly in the bath water. (because you are still using the exact same amount of source heat energy to heat the water)
You may be putting in 1 pots worth of water at higher and higher temperatures, but you will be doing it less and less often.
In fact, as you let the pot get hotter and hotter, the bath with actually get colder and colder because of all the heat lost by the pot itself.
If your engine is 30F hotter, the air cooling effect of the engine itself will dissipate even more BTUs...
Sooo, I don't know what to tell you.
I would put a temp sensor in your lower rad hose and see what's actually going on before I made any decisions.
if your engine temp is like 220, and your lower rad hose is like 150 or less, then I would say you have a water flow issue....
But if your engine temp is like 220 and your lower rad hose is like 190 or higher, then I would say you have a fan CFM issue
(but I can't imagine how @ 2000 rpms @ 70 mph)