Hey guys, hope y'all are doing well. We're having some issues with our 1993 Damon Intruder with the big block in it. For some background, last summer we were road tripping across some of the north western states. On the way back home thru Wyoming we ended up throwing a blade from the clutched fan thru the bottom left of the fan shroud. Luckily it didn't have any issues getting us home, and had missed everything important. Simple fix right? Just replace the fan and all should be well. Weeeell, that hasn't been how it worked out. We had a heavy duty shop (an expansion shop of Houska Automotive if you know them) replace the fan because I didn't have the time to do it myself and with all the old brittle plastic I was worried about breaking things. Got the new OEM-alike fan in (5 blade offset), and it can't get down the road without pegging the gauge and blowing boiling water out of the overflow. Uh oh. Back to the shop. That was about 2 months ago, and they've basically replaced the whole cooling system since and it's still boiling water out of the overflow and pegging the gauge.
A list of what was replaced:
Engine fan (think a stress fracture caused the fan blade to dip out)
Engine fan clutch, Heavy Duty (Idk if the clutch that's on it is right for the application, not sure of the cause but I'm pretty sure it's not engaging cuz I distinctly remember the sound it used to make. RockAuto and GmPartsWearhouse recommend a severe duty)
Thermostat (Should be OE temp, whatever that is)
Rodded the Radiator (Maybe even with a rodding this radiator still isn't pushing enough heat out?)
Water pump (I'm wondering if the shop fixed the original problem and then created a new one with this. Iirc there's two pumps available, reverse rotation for serpentine systems and normal rotation for V-belt. I believe our P30 is outfitted with v-belts, so if they put in one for a serpentine system I imagine that would be an issue)
New radiator cap (15 or 16 pound I believe)
I believe the hoses have been replaced, but I'm not certain
Also, the electric condenser fan does work. Obviously it's not moving enough air by itself to keep the engine cool. I'd read that dirt and dust can clog the space between condenser and radiator, but I'd assume the shop would have cleaned that space out when they had the radiator rodded.
So, eventually it overheats at idle. If you drive it it just heats up quicker, which perplexes me, because I would think if it was a clutch issue the temps would get better at speed. Is this generation supposed to engage the clutch even at highway speeds? I had read that the clutch only engages up to a certain RPM and speed, but that may be incorrect or outdated or just not applicable to this application. Any insight would be great. Yesterday I covered the hole in the shroud (which I hadn't realized might be a problem until recently) with some aluminum tape, maybe thinking covering the hole would get the clutch to engage. No dice. The next thing I'm thinking of trying once we're home tomorrow is disengaging the end of the spring from the front of the clutch and seeing if I can engage it manually. My best guess currently is that the engine is overheating because the clutch isn't engaging. The next question is why isn't a brand new heavy duty clutch engaging. If you hose the rad down is cools off quick, if that adds any insight. Thoughts? Thanks for any help guys