Nissan Frontier Forum banner

Fan Clutch Engaged on Start-up

18K views 23 replies 14 participants last post by  Bcataldi001  
#1 ·
Hello all,
Since I've had my truck, every cold start has begun with the engine fan blowing at full bore, sounding like a semi truck. After about 30 seconds the fan will idle down with the engine and the noise will go away.

I brought it into my auto-tech class today and both my instructors were perplexed on why it was happening and ended up telling me "its just the way it is." There doesn't seem to be anything wrong with the fan clutch but it always goes full bore when its not warmed up (in the hot summer or below 0, it always does it on startup).

My question is - will replacing the fan clutch fix this loud startup? One of my buddy has a 2011 frontier and does not have this problem so i'm not quite bought on the "its just how it is" explanation.

Has this happened to anyone else and did you fix it?

Thank you, your experience or advice would be greatly appreciated :)
 
#3 ·
It's normal.

The clutch has a "viscous" fluid inside it that's thicker and stickier when cold.

The extra thickness makes it more efficient at coupling the engine fan pully with the fan.

After a few seconds of operation, slippage in the fluid warms it up, making it thinner.

Thinner fluid isn't as efficient at coupling the pully and fan - so the fan speed slows down.

326268
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kschill24
#5 · (Edited)
It's normal.

The clutch has a "viscous" fluid inside it that's thicker and stickier when cold.
The extra thickness makes it more efficient at coupling the engine fan pully with the fan.

After a few seconds of operation, slippage in the fluid warms it up, making it thinner.

Thinner fluid isn't as efficient at coupling the pully and fan - so the fan speed slows down.

View attachment 326268
Im sad to say you sold me on the "its just the way it is" explanation... Thank you!!
 
#9 ·
Hello all,
Since I've had my truck, every cold start has begun with the engine fan blowing at full bore, sounding like a semi truck. After about 30 seconds the fan will idle down with the engine and the noise will go away.
EDIT: most of this information is for Electrically controlled radiator fans, did not realize this is apparently a temperature controlled variant. This information may not be relevant.

This reminded me of something, but I could not remember what it was until now. We have a very old vent fan in the bathroom that does the same thing. (sounds like a damn jet taking off but then slows down and stops after less than 5 mins of running). I wonder if when your fan starts out cold everything inside is loose and as it heats up it slows down due to internal friction/heat. This would explain it's loud noise (due to being out of internal alignment). It may be the fan clutch, or the internal bearings on the fan, or even if its getting too much voltage or voltage changes during operation (I'd at least check it), but something I think is creating internal heat and slowly seizing up the fan, or like I said the power supplied may be to blame.

Does the fan speed back up when the engine is under load/hot? I know they are supposed to at a specific rpm, if not that may be the cause. I believe a multi meter can be used in order to detect a resistant force on a motor,( this is from my college days of many years past so bare with me). I do not remember exactly how, but I believe the resistance will spike as it heats up/encounters load if the load is significant it will do this abnormally fast. For all I remember this may as well be akin to voodoo magic.

Outside of that, If it appears to be working fine and speeding up as the engine is under load, it could be what I think it is. Outside of the noise as long as it's working you should be good.

Definitely something to look more into though.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kschill24
#11 · (Edited)
It depends on the state of the clutch when the engine is shut down. There's a thermo-spring on the front to open and close an internal valve releasing oil to engage or disengage the high speed mode of the fan.

If it was hot enough for the thermo-spring to open the valve before shutdown, or if the radiator was hot enough to open the valve after shutdown, the oil will fill the "clutch" vanes to engage high speed even with the motor off. As it cools the valve closes, but it takes centrifugal force to pump the oil out of the clutch. Starting cold will spin that oil out of the clutch in a few seconds, but for those few seconds it runs at high speed.

If you start cold, let the fan return to normal speed and then do a cold shutdown, when you restart again the fan will not run at high speed, as there is insufficient oil in the clutch, and the spring never got hot enough to open the valve.
 
#13 ·
I had that happen on my last Titan 3 or 4 times without being able to pinpoint a particular reason whether first start or temperature outside etc. I know it was in the first 6 months approx and then never did it again whether here in NJ or in Florida but it never occurred again and had just under 60,000 miles at trade in. My thoughts were it was some type of thermostatically controlled spring. Some carburetor chokes had it done that way.
I wasn’t aware it was a fluid driven system and find it amazing how things are engineered.

Clint
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kschill24
#21 ·
100% normal, as described it’s from working out residual fluid that settled in the vanes from the last run. Every vehicle I’ve ever owned with a clutch fan has done this, and no changing the clutch won’t change anything. If anything, it’ll be louder as a new fan clutch should be more effective at locking up harder. Just let it roar and quit worrying about it.
 
#22 ·
agree with BLtheP. This is totally normal, especially in a cold climate. This truck IS louder than most cars though, maybe that's why OP never noticed until the Frontier.
I've noticed sometimes it won't do this if I turn the key to start the truck and let it crank only a couple of times without starting, wait a second and then start it. No idea why but I've noticed that behavior.
 
#23 ·
My '15 SV is garaged, and makes plenty of noise on cold startup. Mirror temp is generally never colder than mid/upper 40s due to our split level house design, even if below zero outside. However, when parked outside overnight in the dead of Winter, it is even louder. So, will call OP's cold startup normal. .02
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kschill24