I'm tracking you are saying it's a PWM signal I'm seeing. If that's the case though, why does it flip instantly to a hard ground at trigger temp? Also the FSM doesn't mention PWM. Would it be so much slower flashing at room temp ECT that maybe I could see it?
I did just connect a relay with the dim ground and it's enough to trigger the relay FWIW.
Also, the PWM frequency does not change. It is always a fixed value, usually 100 Hz, regardless of fan state.
What is changing is the portion of the grounded signal in each waveform. So with an appropriate RC filter you could actually create a linear DC voltage signal from this.
Very similar to how light dimmers work. Light dimmers simply clip the AC waveform. Doesn't affect the frequency or the voltage, just the proportion of time the bulb is powered. Except for the absolute worst quality bulbs, you generally get no more flicker effect as the bulb is dimmed than it would have at full brightness.
To give an idea how fast you'd have to react to be able to see a change, most fans and ECMs are set to have 1% increments in PWM state. Now, if we assume 100 Hz PWM, that means each waveform is 10 milliseconds in length. So each percentage of PWM state corresponds to 1% of 10 milliseconds, or 100 microseconds. This means you'd need to be able to interpret a change 1/10,000th of a second in length to actually understand the PWM signal. (Hence why you need an oscilloscope that can sample at at least 10,000 Hz to actually interpret the waveform.)
To build on that, that means at 25% fan state, the ground connection is provided for 2.5 milliseconds, followed by an open circuit for 7.5 milliseconds. (Repeat this 100x a second.) To change to say 67% fan state, then ground is provided for 6.7 milliseconds, followed by 3.3 milliseconds of open circuit.
