I have done some work today to check out these sensors and see when and how they operate. My car is an 86 example, so it may be different in other cars.
First I took the 2 engine bay sensors out of the car. With each one I connected a multimeter and hung them in a pan of water with a digital thermometer probe.
The bottom sensor, with red plastic, closed at 85 C, I heard it click quite loudly, and as I added cold water, it reopened at 70C. I did this again and got the same result.
When I tried the Top sensor, the water reached 97C and did not close. No vegitable oil in the kitchen so I'll have to measure this one another time.
On the car I wedged the probe against the sump case with a piece of wood. I disconnected the oil temp leads and put a multimeter accross them, when cold it is an open circuit. Started the engine and waited, for quite some time. Eventually the oil temp switch closed and I cut the ignition. The temp rose a bit more, from 41 up to 45 C. So I'm guessing it is closing at 50 C ish as the probe was not actually in the oil.
Now I reconnected the oil temp wires and started the car up again.
The fans were on at a slow speed. When I short out the leads for the bottom sensor, simulating it reaching 85C the fans switched up to full blast. When I short out the top sensor, The Turbo warning light on the dash came on.
When I switch the engine off, The fans stay on for 3 mins at full blow.
If I simulate a cold engine, by disconnecting the oil temp wires, when I switch the engine off,.... no fans at all.
To simulate a HOT motor after switching off, I shorted the wires to the top sensor, nothing happened not even the turbo warning light came on, because the ignition was off. Then I shorted the leads to the bottom sensor and the fans came on full blast for 3 mins. In this test it does not matter what the oil temp is in the sump.
Out I went for an hour, some very spirited driving, lots of on-boost and later stopped in a lay by. WOW... as I did not have the engine cover on and in the mirror I could see the heat radiating up,looked like a film of oil was burning too. On closer examination, YES that turbo was hot, very Hot, and the fans were on, but they did not seem full blast. I pulled back the leads on the bottom sensor a little and shorted the terminal together and the fans then came on full blast.
SO, the turbo was
not hot enough to trip the lower sensor. I don't beleive it!
I have now made up a bracket to reposition the bottom sensor where it will receive more of the turbo's rediated heat. I'll test it tomorrow and post the out come. I don't see any harm in having the fans on at 12 volts, they will suck a lot more heat off the turbo.
ps: any one know why the sensors' grommets say "do not reuse" on them?