Jerry/MT
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2008
- Messages
- 3,141
- Location
- North Idaho-The Palouse
- Tractor
- New Holland TD95D, Ford 4610 & Kubota M4500
This thead has really gotten long for a simple problem like this. I haven't been following every detail so forgive me if I've missed something, but it seems to me you can get all the diagnostic info in about a half hour and determine what the problem is.
I presume you've tested the gauge by grounding the wire and you know that it's OK.
That leaves the sensor and the thermostat as the remaining possible sources for the low temperature indication. If you start the engine without the radiator cap on it and you let it run at ~1000 rpm , the thermostat should open in a few minutes and and you'll see the coolant circulate in the radiator. (Alternately, you can work the tractor without the rad cap installed, checking every few minutes to see if the coolant is circulationg.) If you see coolant circulate right away with a cold engine, you've verified thermostat is stuck open.
There is a posssibility that the thermostat is opening too soon. When the coolant starts to circulate in the radiator, measure the temperature of the incoming coolant. If it's less than ~160°F, the thermostat is opening too soon. This is a realtively common occurance. You can pull it and check it in a pan of hot water to verify the funtionallity.
If the thermostat opens like it is supposed to, then the only thing left to cause a low indication is the sending unit.
I presume you've tested the gauge by grounding the wire and you know that it's OK.
That leaves the sensor and the thermostat as the remaining possible sources for the low temperature indication. If you start the engine without the radiator cap on it and you let it run at ~1000 rpm , the thermostat should open in a few minutes and and you'll see the coolant circulate in the radiator. (Alternately, you can work the tractor without the rad cap installed, checking every few minutes to see if the coolant is circulationg.) If you see coolant circulate right away with a cold engine, you've verified thermostat is stuck open.
There is a posssibility that the thermostat is opening too soon. When the coolant starts to circulate in the radiator, measure the temperature of the incoming coolant. If it's less than ~160°F, the thermostat is opening too soon. This is a realtively common occurance. You can pull it and check it in a pan of hot water to verify the funtionallity.
If the thermostat opens like it is supposed to, then the only thing left to cause a low indication is the sending unit.