Diggin It
Super Star Member
Not disputing that, but it doesnt make much sense to me. Temp senders are just resistors that vary their resistance based on tempature. It shouldn't matter if it's in liquid or air. Liquid transfers heat way more efficiently so I could see it reading if the temp sender was being cooled by the outside of the engine or something & the hot air couldnt heat it up fast enough. I'd assume there wouldnt be enough cooling to drop the sender that much though.
My inner nerd wants to understsnd why it doesn't behave like I think it should.
Suppose ... just suppose that there isn't enough coolant to circulate properly and whatever is in contact with the sensor isn't heating up keeping it cool below the sensor threshold.
Submitted for your approval or at least your analysis.
