MyNameIsMud Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Ive seen the inline temp gauges and wondered is there a way to use an automotive style gauge dash mounted without buying a trail tech? I thought maybe a T fitting and a few couplers to adapt the mechanical gauge to it?Or possibly tapping the radiator for the gauge to thread in to?Just a few ideas is this doable or stupid and not worth the time or effort? I have a few autometer gauges from various cars over the years so id be looking at rigging up the fittings is all. What do you guys think? I also have some different models of tachs in various sizes any way of honkey engeering one to fit and read accurately? Quote
Finch Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 my buddy has a cheap auto gauge one with a probe and just stuck it in where the hose connects and tightened the hose clamp seems to work good Quote
robert0762 Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 I used one for a while and it does work but the needle bounces too much and they go bad quickly. I bought a trail tech digital temp gauge and love it . The cheap autozone ones are 20 bucks then you gotta spend about 15-20 bucks on the brass fittings to hook it all up. So its cheaper and easier to go with the tt. TT comes with the splice and everthing needed to install Quote
WINDYCITYJOHN400 Posted May 1, 2012 Report Posted May 1, 2012 I had one that I bought from a guy on Ebay. It worked great and the needle didn't bounce, but it was a cap tube style and the tube that went from the sensor to the gauge wasn't to sturdy. But I had it cut into my plastics and mounted like a dash mount gauge. Now that I found the digital model from KOSO....I don't mess with anything else. Quote
slktrik Posted May 1, 2012 Report Posted May 1, 2012 Ive seen the inline temp gauges and wondered is there a way to use an automotive style gauge dash mounted without buying a trail tech? I thought maybe a T fitting and a few couplers to adapt the mechanical gauge to it?Or possibly tapping the radiator for the gauge to thread in to?Just a few ideas is this doable or stupid and not worth the time or effort? I have a few autometer gauges from various cars over the years so id be looking at rigging up the fittings is all. What do you guys think? I also have some different models of tachs in various sizes any way of honkey engeering one to fit and read accurately? I use a temp gauge built into the radiator cap. seems accurate. think i ordered it from summitt racing. I did cut a very little bit of plastic to get a better view of it tho. Quote
MyNameIsMud Posted May 1, 2012 Author Report Posted May 1, 2012 Good so it will work. These autometers are pretty tough so we shall see. My next question is what is the normal operating temp? i dont boil over now or anything and someone has just ran the overflow hose down over the pipe and i never see or smell coolant do i need an over flow bottle if im not puking coolant? Also any of you already running this got any pics of your install? And possibly a parts list to complete it. Quote
MyNameIsMud Posted May 2, 2012 Author Report Posted May 2, 2012 Well ive decided after mocking up the gauge i dont like the way it looks and thought about a cheap faze brand electric gauge i pulled out of an older nissan a friend scrapped. I got the gauge sending unit and wiring how do i do this with no battery?Will it work without a battery just off the stator like the lights do? I think i can hide the sending unit wire easier and better than the big funky mechanical gauges sending unit lead. Quote
Jereme6655 Posted May 3, 2012 Report Posted May 3, 2012 Won't work unless your tach somehow works off of AC current. The staters put out AC current....however you can get yourself a small motorcycle battery and then float the ground wire on the stator and add a regulator and it will work as a DC system Quote
WINDYCITYJOHN400 Posted May 3, 2012 Report Posted May 3, 2012 You can rig up something.....but it might end up looking and working like it's rigged. KOSO Quote
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