Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault

   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault #11  
Tip that might narrow down the search - I would start by looking at Japanese car models the same age or a little older. At least for the older Yanmars, they shared Hitachi etc electrical components with whatever cars were widely sold just before that Yanmar model was introduced.

There's no reason for Yanmar to invent a new temperature monitoring system when they could contract for existing components that are already manufactured by the literal millions.
 
   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault #12  
Check '72 Nissan 510, 620 sender. It looks like what Hoye, (USA) stocks, and Yanmar used a lot of '72 Nissan parts.
 
   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Tip that might narrow down the search - I would start by looking at Japanese car models the same age or a little older. At least for the older Yanmars, they shared Hitachi etc electrical components with whatever cars were widely sold just before that Yanmar model was introduced.

There's no reason for Yanmar to invent a new temperature monitoring system when they could contract for existing components that are already manufactured by the literal millions.

Thanks. I spent last night trawling an online parts catalogue. There are a lot of senders that have the same thread and terminal. I've not seen any that have the same 22mm hex on top, they are all 17mm or 19mm, but I'm not sure if that matters. Also do they all have the same resistance properties? If it physically matches, does that mean it will work?
 
   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Check '72 Nissan 510, 620 sender. It looks like what Hoye, (USA) stocks, and Yanmar used a lot of '72 Nissan parts.

Thanks. I Googles that, but it brought up examples that werent threaded.
 
   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault #16  
That one looks about right but it might only output yes/no overheat for a warning light application, rather than variable resistance to drive the needle proportionally on a gauge. Maybe verify that the recommended applications had gauges instead of lights.


Not relevant here but I once read that Ford's gauges don't really indicate proportional temperature - just various broad steps: Cold, Warming up, OK, Too hot.
 
   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault
  • Thread Starter
#18  
That one looks about right but it might only output yes/no overheat for a warning light application, rather than variable resistance to drive the needle proportionally on a gauge. Maybe verify that the recommended applications had gauges instead of lights.


Not relevant here but I once read that Ford's gauges don't really indicate proportional temperature - just various broad steps: Cold, Warming up, OK, Too hot.

Noted. I think I'll just get one to try. As my cooling system seems to be functioning correctly, it should be obvious if the sender isn't right.

I'll match your not relevant with my own. I understand that modern cars have their gauges programmed to sit in the middle of the range and only shoot up when they is a problem. Stops the dealers being hassled with "my cars running a bit warmer than my mates" etc.
 
   / Diagnosing Temp Gauge Fault #19  
That one looks about right but it might only output yes/no overheat for a warning light application, rather than variable resistance to drive the needle proportionally on a gauge. Maybe verify that the recommended applications had gauges instead of lights.


Not relevant here but I once read that Ford's gauges don't really indicate proportional temperature - just various broad steps: Cold, Warming up, OK, Too hot.

Specs say for gauge.
 

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