Early 944 fresh air blower wiring mod - faster fan!

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Althejazzman
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Early 944 fresh air blower wiring mod - faster fan!

Post by Althejazzman »

All the years I've had my 944, the cabin fan has been very feeble. I don't think position 1 does anything, 2 is barely noticeable, and 3 is faster, but not enough to clear a really misty screen. As I understand it, this is because the resistors have become too resisitive! Annoyingly, early 944's and all 924's have the resistors hard-wired to the loom from the switch, and I think the loom is NLA.

I had two possible solutions:
1) Buy some resistors of the correct values, and solder these in place of the originals.
2) Buy a DC fan controller on recommendation of someone else on this forum.

I choose option 2, as it included a variable speed knob, and seemed a more sophisticated solution. But this proved to be hard to wire in, as I couldn't track down the positive feed to the fan. The switch and resistors are actually wired AFTER the fan, so technically on the earth side. Also the fan controller would need a direct positive AND negative to the motor, so I filed that device in the "too hard" box.

Whilst testing and probing the switch, I stumbled across a solution. One of the wires that leads to the resistors is not even connected to the switch! This appears to be a direct wire to the circuit AFTER the motor, but BEFORE any of the resistors, so bridge these, and the fan gets the full 12v (or 14v-ish if engine running). I realised I could remove all the spade connectors from the switch, and put them back in different places. The gist is this:

- Switch position 3 leads to no resistors
- Switch position 2 leads to resistor 3
- Switch position 1 leads to resistor 2
- Unused spade terminal leads to resistor 1

The final wiring can be seen here:
Alt fan wiring (Small).JPG
Alt fan wiring (Small).JPG (86.59 KiB) Viewed 8794 times
Hope this helps other people.
Alex.
'85 944 mostly working
'83 924 "Yin Yang" cheap track car with another member
'01 Vauxhall Combo diesel van for camping, working, and moving slowly

Computer Problems: At your WITS End? http://www.witscomputers.co.uk
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