As I mentioned in my first post on this forum (in the intro thread), my next mod will be an electric fan conversion. I've been going through all the fan threads I could find, trying to absorb all the info that you guys have put out there. I really liked
Jeffy's thread where he used a Mark VIII fan rather than a Taurus fan. From what he said (and what the pictures show), it is very easy to install this fan into a Jeep. I decided this was the way I wanted to go... if only I could find a Mark VIII in a junkyard.
My favorite local wrecking yard announced they are having a half price sale throughout this weekend, beginning today. I couldn't resist that, so I arranged to have today off work and I went. Miracle of miracles, they actually had a Mark VIII and the engine bay was virgin--everything was intact. Giddy as a school boy in sex ed class, I grabbed my tools and quickly had the fan out of the car. Two cars away was a 4.6L V8 Thunderbird, and out of curiosity I looked at its fan--it seemed identical. Just to be sure, I went ahead and removed it also. Sure enough, it is the exact same fan as the Mark VIII in every way. So those of you who want the larger Mark VIII fan now have a much higher likelihood of finding one.
I did notice one difference between the two cars, though. The wiring harness plug on the Thunderbird had the usual 3-wire plug with all three wires present. The Lincoln had the same plug, but only the two outer wires were there--black and blue. I compared the plugs to each other and they are the same; I could plug either one into both fans. So as far as I can tell, Ford decided to run the Lincoln fan only in high rather than use low and high as on the Thunderbird.
Jeffy: is that how you found your Mark VIII fan's wiring connector? Your pictures (such as the one I posted above) imply otherwise, but I was curious enough to ask. Maybe my Lincoln was a later model year than yours, and Ford decided the DOHC 4.6L needed extra cooling fan capacity?
Now I just need to design a bracket for my PS reservoir and relocate my coolant overflow bottle and I'm all set.