found this description
"In low speed mode, "fan cont 1" supplies power to fan 1, then the cooling fan relay #3 routes the power into the second fan, which always has ground on the negative side. Fan relay 2 is off in this mode. This provides half the voltage to each fan, which results in low speed operation (which is quiet). What if one fan stops working and the circuit cannot be completed? The low speed mode doesn't work. But if the engine temperature gets high enough, the high speed mode kicks in. High speed mode will come on any time the engine coolant temperature is too high, not only if low speed mode fails.
In high speed mode, fan relays 1 and 2 are on. Instead of routing power through the second fan, fan relay 3 switches fan 1 to ground. The result is both motors running at full speed, because they are both given the full system voltage.
Aside from expensive transistor controls for the fans (which I can't say I've ever seen in a production car), this is the best way to do it. Many other vehicles that have a high and low speed have two relays. The high speed puts power directly to the fan, while the low speed goes through a resistor that drops the voltage. That wastes power in low speed mode (turned into heat by the resistor), but the worst part is that the ones I've seen turn the low speed off when the high speed comes on. If the high speed fuse blows or there is a problem anywhere in the control system, the fan doesn't run, which leads to overheating when stopped or driving at low speed. Some also have dual-winding motors with the same relay setup (minus the resistor), but the fan still stops working if there is a problem with the high seed circuit when high speed is commanded on.
The 3-relay system can have any one component fail and it will still work, in most cases it functions well enough that there are no cooling problems."
so If I take out the 3rd relay I should be good..right?