Cant. Fan on computer runs on house current (power) which is AC and the car has a DC (direct current) power system.
body of fan to ground and the wire to positive
my fan went out on my wifes 2003 jeep liberty. i just spliced a wire from the wiring harness to another wire that turned on when the car turned on and the fan turned on.
Pull the connector or cut the wire feeding current to the fan. The CPU might overheat and be permanently damaged.
There is probably a short in the fuse block or maybe you just might have a problem with the remote wire for the fan. Is It the radiator fan or the A/C fan?
That question is hard to answer without checking the car over. It could be either a bad sensor, a bad wire, or a bad fan. In the worst case the computer could be screwed up.
The computer uses the two wire sensor near where the upper radiator hose attaches to the engine to decide when to activate the radiator fan.The computer uses the two wire sensor near where the upper radiator hose attaches to the engine to decide when to activate the radiator fan.
plug the wire in on the driver side of the car and 4 bults in it
The computer reads the temperature from the 2 wire sensor next to the thermostat. It then actuates a relay on the inner fender and turns on the fan. [edit] most 3.0 V6 only have a 1 wire sensor.
bwm
Disconnect the plug to your fan. Hook a jumper wire to ground the negative wire and a hot wire to the positive wire. If the fan doesn't work, then you can buy one on Ebay or other sources.
Wire with white, black, and red conductors is intended for use on 220VAC systems in the US (e.g. ranges, dryers) that consume large amounts of power! This is actually two opposite phases of 110VAC.The wires function, by color are:white, neutralblack, 110VAC phase onered, 110VAC phase twoWhat is unclear in your question is the location of this wire: the fan or the computer. If it is an existing fan with these wires, it should only be used in a 220VAC appliance like the one it was removed from. If it is the computer, you have a much larger and older computer than most people (does it happen to contain vacuum tubes?).
no sparking fanThe white wire from the fan to the white wire from the ceiling get wire nutted together.The black and blue wire from the fan go to the black wire from the ceiling and all 3 get wire nutted together. Lastly the green wire from the fan and the bare copper wire from the ceiling get wire nutted together. 90% of fans are wired this way.