Im good n confused now! I know my 4 row dont get it done, seriously thinkin Aluminum.
My 4 row will not cool at creepy crawly speeds, stock fan and ele pusher, hit road speeds cools off in just a min????
Contrary to the people that seel these fans say, an electric pusher does not always mean more air flow and often times it means sigficantly less. They can easily restric airflow. Hard concept to explain but many a young mechaical engineer has been burned by not properly designing fan entrance and exit conditions.
Also what he said above is true. Fins increase the airside surface area and the air side is the hardest side to drive HT. The HT coeff of air is much lower than water that is one reason a well made 3 row might exhibit better HT than a 4 row.
The basics of good bronco cooling are as follows.
1. just because the temperature gauge says its doing 250 DEG F doesn't mean it is. Check and verify that the temperature gauge is correct before you spend a lot of money chasing a problem you do not have. Take it out and dump it in a boiling pot of water it had better read 212 at sea level and whatever water boils at you elevation. Also check another position at say 150 or so.
2. If you are not boiling water out of the radiator you are NOT damaging the engine. Even a 50-50 mix with a 16# cap will not boil out until like 250-260 DEG F and that engine will be fine with a 250 DEG F water temp.
3. Run at least a 190 DEG thermosatat. AT LEAST.
4. Make sure your radiator is clean inside and out. If there is scale on the inside of the tubes go get a new core. stock 3 or a 4 row will work and you do not need a high dollar aluminum radiator, unless you have somereason your engine needs to reject more heat.
5. Shroud, shroud, shroud, shroud.
6. just in case you didn't understand you NEED a shroud in a bronco. The shoud needs to be relatively tight or even sealed to the tanks of the radiator. the fan end shoulD NOT extend more than half way across the fan blades. Because there is an engine right behind the fan the fan MUST be able to sling the air out, but you need at least half the fan covered to get the air to flow well into the fan. A bald fan sittting behind the radiator reciculates air from the engine side without forcing it through the radiator. Hang a cigar down there near the inside of the radiator sometime.
7. Rare but I have seen it make sure you water pump impellors are intact. Not on a bronco but I have seen these wasted away to almost nothing.
8. Body lifts help as do opening up the fenders.
Personal experience. I have a 71 302 with EFI. 2" body lift, nothing particualy special at least these days anyway. When I first put the EFI on it I had one of those high efficiecy 7 blade prop fans with no shroud and a new 3 row rad I think BC sells the fan and if all else fails it does move a lot of air. That EFI engine ran 225 deg F on the highway all the time as well as off road. (accurate gauge and the same gauge used for all these measurements) I ran a mesquite branch as big as my arm up through the radiator and destroyed it. I had a four row core installed with my tanks and ran it with the same unshrouded fan. the ran 205 on the highway but still crept up to about 220 offroad on hot days. That 7 blade fan scrubs off a lot of HP so I built a nice tight fitting shroud and bought a hastings 6 blade fan and fan clutch to give it a try. The difference in torque in that engine is noticeable and it is much quieter to boot. The hastings fan does not move nearly as much air but OH WHAT A DIFFERENCE A shroud makes. Idleing in TX heat, offroad in 106 DEG temps, cruising at 75 MPH that same gauge reads 200-205 all the time. And thats with LESS fan.
200-205 is where the thermostat is controlling so the cooling system is doing all it needs to and then some for. I also gained some horses to boot with the clutch and the less aggressive fan.