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Unless it is a 12 volt DC box fan you cannot run it at all. If it is a 12 volt fan the time it will run depends on it's size and at what speed you run it and the condition of the battery. All you can do is try it.
in black box between battery and front of car
Yes, if it is a 12 volt DC fan.
The cooling fan is electric and the sensor reads that your car is hot. It stays on, even when the car is off so that it can cool your engine to acceptable temperatures. If it didn't, and the car remains too hot, it can warp parts and destroy your engine. If the fan runs for an exceptionally long time, and drains your battery giving you a no start or weak battery slow start condition, you may have a bad cooling fan relay.
the fan relay is like a fuse, it is located in the fuse box underneath the hood of the car next to the battery it is inside the litle black box. if you look on the inside top of that box lid it will tell you witch one is witch
The cooling fan relay for the 2000 Lincoln LS is located behind the battery in the fuse relay box on the driver's side. The cooling fan relay controls the car's cooling fans.
I have a 2001 L300, and the fan relay box is mounted just in front of the battery. Black box about 4-5 inches long and 1-1/2 inches thick.
If you have the fan removed from the car, you can just quickly use jumpers to connect the negative terminal of the fan to the negative terminal of the battery, then connect another jumper to the positive terminal of the fan,and with insulated hands(!) touch the other end to the positive terminal of the battery. If the fan runs, it's fine.
There is a fuse box under the hood, next to the battery. The fan relay is in there.
Either a short to power or a bad fan switch.
Located in the PDM that is the long thin box by the battery, unlatch the cover then look on the inside of the cover for diagram.
It is near the battery underneath the fuse box. It is necessary to remove the battery and fuse box to access it.