I took my Activa for a nice blast last night (just for fun

) after picking the girls up from Guides. The car was nice and warm by the time I arrived home and after easing it into it's tight parking space which always takes a few goes at night, I noticed the cooling fans were not running as I'd expect them to be. I popped the aircon on and still no fans

Ahh well, It'll keep me amused tomorrow I thought, a problem to look into

(don't worry, I love problems!).
Anyway, it was an iffy fan relay. Tapped them in turn and after tapping relay 1500B, the LH fan ran at full speed and the RH one at half speed

I took all relays out, was delighted to see all relay sockets in perfect condition (no burning or signs of overheating), juggled them at put them back in. All good. I juggled their piositions another three times and each time the fans worked perfectly. As an aid to fault-finding on low speed, the fans will run with relay 1500B removed. I could not test high speed as to disconnect the Bitron sensor on an Activa you either need to be an Octopus with asbestos tentacles or remove the turbo ducting at the back of the engine before you begin and even then it's handy to have that Octopus! Did I say access to the Bitron sensor was poor?
This is a scrap of the circuit showing the relays:
Relay 1500A operates for slow running with 1500C and B released. For high-speed operation, all three relays are operated (operated = old GPO Telephone engineers term meaning the relay coil is energised).
I found an error in the layout diagram:
Bearing in mind the diagram is looking at the back of the relay box (i.e through a transparant set of radiators), the positions of Relays 1500B and C are in fact transposed
I shall sport out on three new relays in due course. Activas run hot and need their cooling fans to be 100% reliable.
I had a word with the company who supplied the spheres on my Activa (the rears are down on pressure) and asked about their three year warranty as the spheres are just over two years old. After a long and interesting chat, I discovered that the pressure loss I had seen was considered normal for two year old spheres and the warranty (fairly I guess) only covers spheres that fail totally in that period. Fair play as thinking on, if the company offered a three year warranty on them remaining at their design pressure, they'd be forever servicing warranty claims and would quickly go bust. The company in question is a long way away from me and I'd have to either send them with a courier or visit.
Activa spheres are now rare enough to make one think twice about entrusting them to a courier in case they get lost. If couriers can loose HMRC data on CD, what's to say they'll be any better with a box of spheres? Besides a box of spheres weigh a ton cost a bomb to send.
I then had a very enjoyable natter with Martin over at Pleiades who is about 45 minutes away from me so the upshot is, I'll go and see Martin in the week, clutching an armful of spheres for a recharging session. Now GSF no longer supply Activa spheres, recharging or a second mortgage to buy genuine Citroen ones are about the only options. Due to the credit crunch, the former option suits me best and besides, it gives me an excuse to go and see Martin and sample his tea
Before I can though, I need a sphere tool to get the old spheres off again and to this end, finally, and after all these years, I've treated myself to a genuine Pleiades tool

Frankly, it's the only sphere tool I know that will undo the Activa Hydractive and Balancing spheres due to their very confined locations. A design classic is the Pleiades tool!