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Hour Meter
Has anyone installed an hour meter for their engine? If so, where have you connected it? I'm thinking the run side of the ignition switch so it only runs while the engine is running. I really don't want to tap into that line at the switch though. Suggestions?
It seems more logical to me to go by engine hours than miles between oil changes. |
Re: Hour Meter
Not really more logical because these aren't boats.
If you have 100 hours driving down a highway, it's going to be a lot different than idling 100 hours. Much more different than a combined city/highway average. What would you be using as your benchmark for changing the oil? |
Re: Hour Meter
Plug it in at the fuse box to an ignition switched auxiliary. No cutting required.
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Re: Hour Meter
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^^^^.. What he said. IGN UNFUSED in the fuse box. LockDoc |
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I'm also seeing more and more research showing oil is happier with filter changes more often than a complete change. Just my observations...... Leon; MARKDTN..........Thanks for the help |
Re: Hour Meter
An oil pressure switch is the most accurate and switched power is the easiest. So feed it ignition power and ground it through an oil pressure switch.
Run an hourmeter and compare to your odometer. A simple week by week log or fuel log recording mileage and hours will give you a very good feel for adverage mileage vs hours run. |
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Re: Hour Meter
The point of wiring it like he says is if the "ign" is on, the Hobbs meter won't be counting hours if the engine is not actually running. The oil pressure ground activates the meter. Otherwise sitting with the key on could cause the meter to run.
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Re: Hour Meter
If you don't drive more miles in the recommended change interval, change the oil quarterly. Example-
If the manual says 5,000 miles between oil changes and you don't drive 5,000 mile in a quarter, change the oil quarterly. The important thing is to remove any crud or condensation that may be deposited or formed due to not driving enough miles (thus getting it hot enough to remove condensation and unburnt gasoline from the oil). When I worked as a mechanic, I had a guy come in with a five-year-old Monte Carlo. The oil change interval for miles by the manual was 5,000 miles. He hadn't driven it 5,000 miles in 5 years! That oil was sludge, to say the least. He didn't read down to the part where short trips are worse on the engine, and dictated 6 month intervals in those days (IIRC) if the 5,000 miles wasn't reached. Save yourself a bunch of needless work and expense by following this sort of plan. Note that it is quite conservative, and devised by the engineers to ensure that the vehicle successfully survived the warranty period. |
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Yes, you can ground this to the dash with no problems. I would just change it once a year or 5000 miles whichever comes first. |
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