
Race Testing Andrig's Plastic Fan
Above is one of RetroRacing's engines, a 1915cc with Weber (clone) 48IDF's on 38mm venturis, an Engle W140 cam, 42mm intake valves, 1.25 rockers, and a 1.5" tubing exhaust feeding a short Stinger with custom made low restriction baffle. The center mount aluminum fan housing hides Andrig's

Andrig's lightweight plastic fan. It is 74% lighter than a welded OEM fan, provides 7-8% more air flow, and is a single piece that will not fly apart. We've already tested the fan in a Ferrari Club event aka Ferraris vs the lone Karmann Ghia). We won because of light rain and timid Ferrari drivers. Just to be fair, we used our very HSR class legal engine, 85.5mm pistons x 74mm (Porsche 356) stroke.
Andrig says he has tested the fan to 8,000 RPM engine speed, which equates to 12,800 fan RPM, without issue. We have personally and physically tested it to 7000 RPM, slaloming around Ferraris. The fan's lack of weight boosts revving just like a lightweight flywheel.
Our only concerns -- which are provable on the track -- are does the fan rob power at high RPM by being so efficient in moving more air? We hope to see some effects at Barber Motorsports Park this 19th-22nd May 2022 near Birmingham Al. If it does rob power we'll know it by RPM loss. The fix would be a fan with fewer or trimmed blades. Just to be clear, this is an issue with racing, not street use.
The Ferrari Club event was not a good test, as our driver had little time dodging Ferraris to watch the tach on the short Talladega Gran Prix track where we hit 4th gear only once a lap with our 3.88 rear end.
https://www.andrigsaircooledtechnology.com