Hello, All-
Can anyone think of a reason the PO of my 64 Dart inserted a resistor (labeled 10w 5.1 Ohms 5%) in the wire from my temp sender? The resistor is a few inches from the sender, just hanging in mid air over the intake. My temp gauge started working intermittently yesterday. Needle looked fine, then gauge pegged low, then ok again. Happens after hard acceleration or bump, so figuring some sort of short. Sender wire is ancient, arthritic and been hacked a couple of times. I want to run a new wire to the bulkhead. I want to delete this resistor, but not if it is going to fry the instrument circuit board or cause other damage. All other gauges work great. Car is a 64 Dart GT. '77 318, Edelbrock Performer intake. Sensor/sender looks after market(stud and nut connector). Perhaps the sender is not right for my application and is being resistance corrected? PO removed an Electronic Ingnition set up and went back to points if that matters.
Thanks,
Driver Ed
The resistor added inline with the lead from the temperature sensor back to the gauge was added for a few possible reasons:
Possibility 1) The sending unit does not have the correct resistance range, specifically, the resistance across the range is lower than the correct sending unit. The sending unit could be the wrong one for the application, or partially defective unit. The resistor was added to increase the resistance across the range, specifically +5 ohms at each point.
The original sending unit was Chrysler number 2426458 (superseded numbers: 2958320, 4051140, 4051141). The following image shows an example of this sending unit:
Verify that the sending unit resistance is correct, and removal of the resistor should allow correct readings at the gauge unless its calibration is off. See the following section for resistance values.
Possibility 2) The gauge calibration is off, and the resistor was added to offset the difference at the gauge. The gauges have mechanical adjustment to calibrate the needle reading independently. Although not necessarily proper, the calibration of the gauge can be adjusted to match the system.
Possibility 3) The gauge and sending unit were reading correctly, but the needle position is higher than is comfortable for the observer, so the resistor is added to lower the reading across the range. This is particularly evident on the "hot side" as the low sending unit resistance at the high end is now not as low, so the temperature looks cooler.
Dealer mechanics might have done this to remedy a customer complaint of the vehicle running too hot, although it actually wasn't.
Checking the Sending Unit Resistance at Operating Temperatures
For testing the sending unit in operation, the following cardinal points and resistance values are of interest:
- Ambient temperature at about 77 degrees Fahrenheit (25 degrees Celsius), before running engine, gauge needle at lowest point, sending unit resistance = 360 Ω
- Engine at ~120 degrees Fahrenheit (49 degrees Celsius): The needle moves to Cold mark on the temperature gauge, sending unit resistance = 72 Ω
- Engine at ~190 degrees Fahrenheit (88 degrees Celsius: The needle moves to middle on the temperature gauge, sending unit resistance = 22 Ω (approximate range of ~18 to ~26 Ω)
- Engine at ~230 degrees Fahrenheit (110 degrees Celsius): The needle moves to Hot mark on the temperature gauge, sending unit resistance = 9 Ω
With the resistor removed, no damage to the gauge from the sending unit will occur if lowest sending unit resistance is ~7 ohms. The associated wiring and connections, in good condition, between the sending unit and the gauge adds a little resistance which should be less than 0.2 Ω.
Checking the Gauge
To check cardinal points of the gauge, use the following resistance values:
Chrysler Specification:
Cold = 72 Ω
Middle = 22 Ω
Hot = 9 Ω
Gauge position tolerance at these points is listed in the service manual.
Miller Special Tool Specification (used by Chrysler for testing):
Cold = 75 Ω +/-5% -> 71.2 - 75.8 Ω
Middle = 22 Ω +/-5% -> 20.9 - 23.1 Ω
Hot = 10 Ω +/-5% -> 9.5 - 10.5 Ω
The Miller C-3826 tester can be used to test these points, or the point resistances can be made using fixed resistors or a combination thereof, variable resistors, decade resistance boxes.
Regarding test lead resistance when measuring low resistance values
Minor test lead resistance is not much of a concern at higher resistances, but when measuring low resistances, such as the ground to ground continuity, low resistance of sending units, or ballast resistors, account for the resistance of the test leads connected to the measuring device. This can be done by shorting the leads together, noting the resistance, and subtracting it from the measurement readings, or use the meter's relative setting (if equipped) similarly with the lead shorting.
Some meters have a function to measure conductance and convert accordingly for low resistance values. Others, typically lab or some bench type meters can use a four wire ohms measurement to overcome any test lead effects.