Registration and Posting Agreement
For 1979 - 1990 vintage temperature gauges, the lowest (cold) line of the gauge corresponds to 1,365 ohms of sender resistance, the center line of the gauge corresponds to 96 ohms, and the highest (hot) line corresponds to 55 ohms. In other words, disconnecting the gauge from its sender will deflect the gauge needle fully CCW, below "cold," whereas grounding the sender wire will cause full scale CW deflection, past the maximum "hot" line.
...do you have a part number for the sender?
A 47, and 10 ohm, 1/4 watt resisters in series, only brought the gauge to the second tick mark, 1/4 gauge reading.
A 47, and 10 ohm, 1/4 watt resisters in series, only brought the gauge to the second tick mark, 1/4 gauge reading.Sent from my SM-S920L using Tapatalk
How about mounting it parallel with the floor and use a flush mount coverhttps://www.summitracing.com/parts/mor-85700?seid=srese1&cm_mmc=pla-google-_-shopping-_-srese1-_-moroso&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI6uTViNnU1QIVgSOBCh2POwt_EAQYASABEgI-HvD_BwE
Try WT359P sending unit