@@havetahunt1711 cleaning the back is key. The machines 4 years old. I don't think it was just the one ride that caused the overheating issue but no matter how many times I use the pressure washer or the hose on the front and the back. It would still over heat. I even took the fan off while everything was still installed and got the hose in between the radiator and the fan and that still didn't work. The last option that I thought of to figure out if the fan or the radiator was junk was to pull them out and take them apart. Even with a flashlight I could not see the clogs in the back.
Industrial filters that suck e.g. fine sawdust into cloth sacks have a pulse settting where the flow is reversed in pulses to knock the dust build-up off. Would it be possible to SUCK the air through the radiator and then reverse the fan? I guess not, but what about having a small air compressor to use when stationary that can release a dispersed shockwave? I dunno, I'm talking out of my ass.
I'm not sure how people are cleaning the backside of the radiator without taking it all the way out. Before I pulled the radiator and fan assembly out I took the four screws that the fan connects to the radiator off and I was able to get a garden hose back there but just barely and obviously that didn't work either.
Did cleaning it help? I'm fighting the same problem. Go Pack Go!!
@@havetahunt1711 cleaning the back is key. The machines 4 years old. I don't think it was just the one ride that caused the overheating issue but no matter how many times I use the pressure washer or the hose on the front and the back. It would still over heat. I even took the fan off while everything was still installed and got the hose in between the radiator and the fan and that still didn't work. The last option that I thought of to figure out if the fan or the radiator was junk was to pull them out and take them apart. Even with a flashlight I could not see the clogs in the back.
Industrial filters that suck e.g. fine sawdust into cloth sacks have a pulse settting where the flow is reversed in pulses to knock the dust build-up off.
Would it be possible to SUCK the air through the radiator and then reverse the fan? I guess not, but what about having a small air compressor to use when stationary that can release a dispersed shockwave?
I dunno, I'm talking out of my ass.
I'm not sure how people are cleaning the backside of the radiator without taking it all the way out. Before I pulled the radiator and fan assembly out I took the four screws that the fan connects to the radiator off and I was able to get a garden hose back there but just barely and obviously that didn't work either.