Ron
Enthusiast
<FONT face="Comic Sans MS">As many of you have no doubt observed, the stock oil pressure gauge virtually worthless. It is inaccurate, extremely slow to respond and really just nice decoration.
I my quest to keep the stock look, but make it truly functional, (while keeping it electrical rather than mechanical) I have tested the sender and gauge to identify the culprit.
Unfortunately, it's both.
The stock sender increases resistance as oil pressure increases, from about .4 ohms @ zero to 60 ohms @ 60 PSI. The issue with the sender is twofold. First, you'll get a 12% average variance as you move up and down in pressure. For example, at 25 psi, you'll get a reading of 32.2 ohms on the way up, and 36.4 on the way down. You'll freeze at 50 PSI, but the sender with drift up and down 4 ~ 5 ohms. Worse, if you pressurize the system to say 65 psi, then rapidly dump the pressure to zero, the sender with take almost 6 seconds to read .4 ohms.
For comparison, I took a 32 year old oil pressure sender out of my 1970 Trans Am and mounted it in my test rig. While it wasn't perfect either, it was rock steady when the pressure froze and dropped to zero immediately on a pressure dump.
The gauge itself, shown enough resistance to read 70 psi then immediately shown zero ohms, took 3 ~ 4 seconds to register zero.
The gauge problem is silicone grease. It's a sticky thick fluid that is only removable by destroying the gauge.
.
.
The only solution I see is swapping out the gauge guts with a better design and replacing the sender (1/8 NPT 27 thread) with a higher quality unit. This should enable a stock look with the responsiveness needed to provide functionality.
Has anyone already accomplished this or able to give additional insight?
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I my quest to keep the stock look, but make it truly functional, (while keeping it electrical rather than mechanical) I have tested the sender and gauge to identify the culprit.
Unfortunately, it's both.
The stock sender increases resistance as oil pressure increases, from about .4 ohms @ zero to 60 ohms @ 60 PSI. The issue with the sender is twofold. First, you'll get a 12% average variance as you move up and down in pressure. For example, at 25 psi, you'll get a reading of 32.2 ohms on the way up, and 36.4 on the way down. You'll freeze at 50 PSI, but the sender with drift up and down 4 ~ 5 ohms. Worse, if you pressurize the system to say 65 psi, then rapidly dump the pressure to zero, the sender with take almost 6 seconds to read .4 ohms.
For comparison, I took a 32 year old oil pressure sender out of my 1970 Trans Am and mounted it in my test rig. While it wasn't perfect either, it was rock steady when the pressure froze and dropped to zero immediately on a pressure dump.
The gauge itself, shown enough resistance to read 70 psi then immediately shown zero ohms, took 3 ~ 4 seconds to register zero.
The gauge problem is silicone grease. It's a sticky thick fluid that is only removable by destroying the gauge.
.
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.
The only solution I see is swapping out the gauge guts with a better design and replacing the sender (1/8 NPT 27 thread) with a higher quality unit. This should enable a stock look with the responsiveness needed to provide functionality.
Has anyone already accomplished this or able to give additional insight?
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