RustyPile
Left on own accord
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2017
- Posts
- 901
- Reaction score
- 1,124
- Location
- Elkhart, TX
- First Name
- Nick
- Truck Year
- 1983 GMC
- Truck Model
- 1500
- Engine Size
- 350 SBC
As stated in my introduction, I am a retired automobile mechanic.. I worked in the field for over 30 years.. During the last 10 - 12 years I worked exclusively with electrical issues and drivability problems. Even with all my experience, I'm still perplexed by this particular problem..
Before starting this thread, I searched through about 4 pages of old threads, searching to see if my problem had been addressed in the past.. I found a few similar issues, but none that were exactly like mine.. Forgive me if I've brought up a past issue that has been covered and solved..
I recently bought a 1983 GMC Sierra Classic 1500.. Full gauge instrumentation -- no tach and no idiot lights.. Temp, fuel, and oil pressure gauges didn't work when I bought the truck.. Oil pressure sensor wasn't connected and the sender wire for the fuel gauge was severed.. Proper operation of these 2 gauges was restored when the connections were repaired. The temp gauge would respond to grounding the lead, but the temp sending unit was one for a light.. I installed the proper sending unit and the gauge would never move from any position where it "parked", no matter the coolant temperature.. I obtained a new reproduction gauge spec'd for '73 - 87 models. Although the gauge has a different face with "H", "C", and hash marks instead of temperature marks, the vendor assured me the gauge would interchange with the original. When installed, the gauge would move to the "C" and never move with coolant temperature changes.. Suspecting either a defect or not interchangeable, I returned the gauge.. I obtained another reproduction gauge from a different vendor.. It gave the same response -- no matter the coolant temperature, the gauge never moved off the "C". I checked the resistance response of 3 different sending units -- all ranged from approx. 1400 ohms "cold" to approx. 250 ohms boiling point. The resistance response range of the 2 gauges ranged from 150 ohms needed to just lift the needle off the "cold peg", 65 ohms for mid scale, and 30 ohms for a full scale hot reading.. I've thoroughly checked the wiring, PC board, terminals, and contacts for the instrument cluster and found no problem areas.
What am I missing here?? do I have gauges and/or sending units from a bad batch from the factory?? wrongly applicated (is that a word?) gauges and/or sending units?? I'm wondering if these reproduction gauges require the older sending unit??? Anyone else experienced this?? Should I place a gauge order with a totally different vendor hoping to get a gauge from a different batch?? What gives? Any and all help will be appreciated..
Thanks, RustyPile
Before starting this thread, I searched through about 4 pages of old threads, searching to see if my problem had been addressed in the past.. I found a few similar issues, but none that were exactly like mine.. Forgive me if I've brought up a past issue that has been covered and solved..
I recently bought a 1983 GMC Sierra Classic 1500.. Full gauge instrumentation -- no tach and no idiot lights.. Temp, fuel, and oil pressure gauges didn't work when I bought the truck.. Oil pressure sensor wasn't connected and the sender wire for the fuel gauge was severed.. Proper operation of these 2 gauges was restored when the connections were repaired. The temp gauge would respond to grounding the lead, but the temp sending unit was one for a light.. I installed the proper sending unit and the gauge would never move from any position where it "parked", no matter the coolant temperature.. I obtained a new reproduction gauge spec'd for '73 - 87 models. Although the gauge has a different face with "H", "C", and hash marks instead of temperature marks, the vendor assured me the gauge would interchange with the original. When installed, the gauge would move to the "C" and never move with coolant temperature changes.. Suspecting either a defect or not interchangeable, I returned the gauge.. I obtained another reproduction gauge from a different vendor.. It gave the same response -- no matter the coolant temperature, the gauge never moved off the "C". I checked the resistance response of 3 different sending units -- all ranged from approx. 1400 ohms "cold" to approx. 250 ohms boiling point. The resistance response range of the 2 gauges ranged from 150 ohms needed to just lift the needle off the "cold peg", 65 ohms for mid scale, and 30 ohms for a full scale hot reading.. I've thoroughly checked the wiring, PC board, terminals, and contacts for the instrument cluster and found no problem areas.
What am I missing here?? do I have gauges and/or sending units from a bad batch from the factory?? wrongly applicated (is that a word?) gauges and/or sending units?? I'm wondering if these reproduction gauges require the older sending unit??? Anyone else experienced this?? Should I place a gauge order with a totally different vendor hoping to get a gauge from a different batch?? What gives? Any and all help will be appreciated..
Thanks, RustyPile