View Full Version : Temp gauge pegged
Luva65wagon
June 10th, 2013, 10:43 PM
On the Comet, which is going to a new home on Wednesday (they will announce that themselves, I'm sure) I have been trying to debug the temp gauge all day.
Here's the history: It (temp) wasn't reading and neither was the fuel gauge. Once I changed the gas tank and sender neither gauges worked still, so I have a collection of constant voltage regulators (CVR) and swapped out a couple until the fuel gauge came to life. Still the temp gauge was COLD all the time.
So I did the checks and could peg the temp side if I grounded the sender wire. Gauge is good. So I checked the sender and it was open.
Got a new sender from NAPA Sunday and installed it tonight and now it will peg the temp gauge if I hook up the sender wire. Thinking I had a bad sender I had another from a later head (1/8" pipe). Hook it up and it pegs it too.
I have other instrument clusters of various years and hook them up one at a time and all peg.
So, this has me totally stumped. I'm pretty sure the sender is the right one (according to specs), but not able to find what cold resistance is supposed to be. I ran it under really hot (insta-hot) water and resistance was close to hot value. Cold is between 220 - 350 ohms on all my cars.
I know something changed in '63, but not sure what. The sender went to 1/8 pipe from 1/4 pipe and resistance was slightly different at 220 degrees:
1962
http://www.napaonline.com/Catalog/CatalogItemDetail.aspx?R=ECHTS6464_0162101090
1963
http://www.napaonline.com/Catalog/CatalogItemDetail.aspx?R=ECHTS6178_0162101093
Anyway I search high and low for an explanation to this phenomenon, but right now I am stumped. I have yet to pull a CVR from one of my other cars, but I have two that do nothing and 2 that do the same thing. I'm assuming the two that are working OK with gas gauge are working, but I will check the voltage output tomorrow. Got too dark to continue.
I know I'm usually the one to answer this sort of question, but maybe someone else may have other senders laying around I can test with - or something else to add. I may have to add temp gauge under dash. This is the last thing I said I would solve.
Jeff W
June 11th, 2013, 10:07 PM
Would it help if I get an ohm reading off my 63 head?
Jeff W
June 11th, 2013, 10:31 PM
296 ohms on the 1965 head I have in the nice warm basement. I could check that without going out in the dark. I'm with you and think a defective CVR would cause the fuel level gauge to not work as well.
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 10:55 AM
Well I spent a good 4 hours yesterday swapping CVR's on this thing and getting all sorts of odd readings. I also dug out my dad's old analog DVM I inherited and got it working again and did voltage tests. FalconParts.com has a nice diagnostic page on this and I didn't get readings they said I should get on any of the 5 spare CVR's I have. Finally, around 8PM I decided I'm gonna just have a look inside one of these critters. Suffice it to say all of them showed issues.
For those of you who don't know what we're talking about here, a CVR is a constant voltage regulator. It is crude. It is fragile. The way it works is they have this "U" shaped portion with one end of the U going to the gauges and the other end is a contact. That contact sits on another contact, similar to a set of points, and the other contact connects to +12 volts. Wrapped around the arm of the U that has the contact is a winding of fine insulated wire going to ground. When you first connect 12 volts to the thing it is going to feed 12 volts to the gauge, but that's when the function of the wire wrapping the U comes into play. It heats the thing up. This heating causes the U portion to contract and lift one end of the U, the contact end, off the other contact. Voltage to the gauge ceases. As does the voltage to the fine wire. It cools, retracts, and starts to heat again. Rinse and repeat, for ever and ever, amen. The result of this cycle is a voltage ON/OFF swing of about 0-10 volts when all is well. You can adjust the one non-U contact point to add more tension to the U side to increase or decrease the amount of time this thing is in the heat cycle - or putting out voltage. The end goal is an average on-off of about 5 volts to the gauges.
But let me reiterate - these things are crude. Every one I opened up showed shorts in the small wire, burned point contacts, corrosion.
Bottom-line is I need to replace the CVR on the Comet. Then I can trust the temp gauge, and do whatever adjustment to the fuel sender as needed to get it to read the right thing. With the best CVR I had, with the closest adjustment (still irratic) I could make to it - the temp gauge sort of works now, but with 10 gallons of gas in the tank it reads just off empty.
:doh:
Interestingly these parts vary in price from $20 at Dennis Carpenter all the way to $70 at Dearborn Classics. I think I will buy 3 from Carpenter and replace all of them I have - or at least have the two spare that are new.
Jeff W
June 12th, 2013, 11:29 AM
How about the solid state versions? Seems the way to go.
I think john henry said he would make some for around 23 cents - maybe time to check in with him.:rocker:
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 11:38 AM
I've seen those somewhere, but have not had time to look for them.
I know, it seems this could be done with a simple electronic part and I do recall hearing John mentioning that.
Parts already ordered.
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 11:44 AM
I can fix you up with a 5volt regulator that cost a dollar if it will work, it has three pins 12 volts in 5 volts out and a ground ..radio shack has them LM-7805:rocker:..jh
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 11:46 AM
But have we tried this with our gauges? Is it this "pulsating function" of voltage these gauges use - or a constant 5 volts? If it were as simple as this, could we not be going into business making these?
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 12:06 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzLifw0W94g
This is a discussion video on creating one of these. Humm... I could build that in 15 minutes too!
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 12:08 PM
Though I don't know why he didn't just plop it into the same can and use the can as heat sink. Probably enough surface area.
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 12:23 PM
they also make a 6 volt one if 6 volts is needed. I think I have a 6 volt in stock if anyone wants to try it...jh
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 12:42 PM
This guy used an 8 volt version - why I have not found out. I'd like to fix this before she comes to get the car tonight, but may not get so lucky.
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 01:05 PM
The guy on that u-tube thing used a 7805-a [ 5 v ], I have a LM-317 which can make any voltage you need 1 to 12...jh
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 01:27 PM
His video was using a 7805, but he apparently changed to a 7808 because he said the 5 volt unit, under load, wasn't sufficient. So I may swing by RS on the way home and see if I can duplicate just what he did.
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 01:34 PM
The guy on that u-tube thing used a 7805-a [ 5 v ], I have a LM-317 which can make any voltage you need 1 to 12...jh
I see that you do that by applying resistors to vary the voltage according to some formula. Since we sort of know what the voltage should be, and because this guy already did the ground-work (and concluded the 8 volt version supplies the correct results under load), I'll try his way first and go from there.
Jeff W
June 12th, 2013, 01:38 PM
I can hardly wait!:banana:
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 01:41 PM
RS may not have a 7808 they are not used much, I can find out the resistor size for the lm 317..jh
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 01:43 PM
Me as well. It seems such a simple solution too. I have enough cans I can make 5 of them right away!
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 02:15 PM
Yeah, quick search shows 7808 not a Radio Shack stocked item. Can get lots on-line. LM317?
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 03:04 PM
I have a 6v I made for my cd player you can have or the TO3 8v can [ transistor type ] ..jh:BEER:
Luva65wagon
June 12th, 2013, 03:09 PM
I have 317's here and calculated R1 @ 240 ohms and R2 @ 1.3K ohms gives 8 volts out. At least I think so...
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 03:45 PM
wire it up and check voltage 7or8 is close enough, I'am out of 240s and only have 1ks so I gave up.. if you cans the case is v out so must be insulated from any ground, but you knew that...hope it works ok. we could put it in a box and charge like dearborn's theves wharehouse...jh
Jeff W
June 12th, 2013, 05:14 PM
Technically couldn't you use a pot instead of a fixed resistor so you can "fine tune" the fuel level gauge to be accurate?
falcon cobra
June 12th, 2013, 05:54 PM
Yes jeff, I use it with a 5k pot and have a varable voltage depending how much voltage you put into it up to 35 volts..jh
Luva65wagon
June 13th, 2013, 10:21 AM
That's very true! You could fine tune the gauges until your hot engine reads cold and you could happily ignore it - like most people do with idiot light anyway.
[thumb]
Sadly I didn't get to the place yesterday I could do anything to fix this on the Comet before it left my possesion, but I am now armed with a plan and may experiment using a host of dashes and parts I have laying around. I'll either install into it later one of the originals coming to me from Dennis Carpenter, or perfect a solid-state replacement.
pbrown
June 13th, 2013, 03:00 PM
That's very true! You could fine tune the gauges until your hot engine reads cold and you could happily ignore it - like most people do with idiot light anyway.
Just put a sticker over the gauge and draw in the correct temp with a Sharpie.
BPVan
June 13th, 2013, 09:39 PM
Roger -
FWIW I bought a solid state regulator off of eBay to replace my "crude" regulator. I have been running it for over a year now and all of my gauges work great, never had one issue. They are a little more than $1 but that is made up by the time you save as it is plug and play.
Luva65wagon
June 27th, 2013, 09:50 AM
Hey all.
For what it's worth I received 3 regulators I ordered from Dennis Carpenter. They were in the original style package and I mentioned to Gina before I put something into her car I wanted to test these 3 and see what they output.
I was a little surprised to notice they didn't have the little screw you could adjust things with. When I applied voltage to them they came up at a steady 5 volts instantly. No pulsing 0-10 volts. So I peeled one open to discover they are, in fact, solid state. The guts are potted in some black epoxy resin, so no telling exactly what they used, but there is no bi-metallic heater in there.
These were $20 a piece.
I'm going to throw one into the Ranchero tomorrow and see what kind of readings I get. The one in the Ranchero is working, so I assume my readings should be similar.
I do have some 7808 regulators coming from China ($3 on ebay) so I may build up one of those too and see what difference there is with these.
falcon cobra
June 27th, 2013, 02:50 PM
That why they pot things so people won't steal there stuff, but why waste the epoxy for such a small thing like that...oh well..there is a place called digi key that sell lots of electronics in the usa, I havent got anything from them in years. sounds like 5 V will work..jh
Luva65wagon
June 27th, 2013, 03:57 PM
Don't know why these are 5 volts when the guy on YouTube said the 7805 (5v) version didn't maintain 5 volts under load and he went to the 7808 in final version. That's what I bought off ebay, 7808.
Maybe this Carpenter version will hold up under load and maintain the 5 volts. We'll see tomorrow.
Luva65wagon
July 1st, 2013, 02:14 PM
Installed one of the DC versions on the Ranchero and it seems to read the same on the gauges as the old one did. So I would say they're a go. Contacted Gina about getting one onto her car. Maybe a trip to see Steve at the same time?
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