It would not be abnormal, so long as the fan does not come on when you switch on from cold. The fan's job is to draw air through the radiator to cool the contained liquid to a suitable working temperature. The fans sensor is activated by the temperature of the coolant. If this is a problem which worries you, try driving as gently and slowly as possible for the last mile or two of your journey. If things are normal the fan should not run on switch-off as that 'trick' will have allowed the coolant to get below the fan-kick-in temperature before you stop the engine. If your vehicle has a temperature gauge use the rteading as an indication.
Beacuse its so hot, it will overheat if the radiator fan doesn't run after the engine is turned off. It usually will stop itself after 5 mins.
The engine coolant fan can keep running after the engine is turned off in any car because the temperature gauge is in the radiator. As long as the radiator is still hot, the fan will keep running until the temperature gauge says it has cooled enough.
The fan should turn off after the engine is shut off. If it stays on, the radiator fan relay has failed.
That one should run anytime the a/c is turned on.
Yes, when the a/c is used the engine works harder which rises the temp of the engine then turn the fans on to cool the radiator.
yes
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The 1997 Ford Mustang uses an electric engine cooling fan . The electric motor and the fan it drives are in a housing attached to the radiator between the engine and the radiator
no the radiator fan will only run when the engine is up to temp and needs to cool back down usually 180 to 220 degrees
Yes, if the radiator fan is not working, it can cause overheating of the engine. The radiator fan helps to cool down the engine by pulling air through the radiator to remove heat. Without the fan, the engine may not receive adequate cooling, leading to overheating.
yes it does on almost every vehicle
When air conditioning or front defroster are turned on it will turn on A/C compressor which requires the A/C condensor to be cooled (via radiator fan).