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A question about gmc 1969
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Hi
I have a question . Is it possible to convert Mechanical oil gauge To Electric oil pressure gauge ؟ I want the same gauge but electrician |
Re: A question about gmc 1969
Good question, I wish I had a answer for you.
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Re: A question about gmc 1969
Why do you want to convert? A VDO with a 10-2 Oclock might be close enough to stick your stock face on.
Good luck, post your solution if you hassle with it. j |
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j |
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Re: A question about gmc 1969
Mine has been working since 1970, no leaks yet but if it starts I'll replace the lines. Then I should be good for the next 50 or so years.
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Re: A question about gmc 1969
I don't know if this will work, but if you are looking for a possible solution, you might be able to use the later style oil pressure gauge from a truck or suburban. My 89 suburban (below) has one of the electric units, and that is a fairly common swap for the volt gauge.
If you grab the oil pressure sending unit off the newer engine, the block should be the same, so it would just be a matter of connecting up the wires and tapping into power off the rest of your gauges. http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/a...1&d=1193897128 |
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You might try a high-end gauge restorer like "Corvette Clocks by Roger" in Jackson TN. They could possibly convert it.
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The down side of going electric is the loss of accuracy. Every connection adds resistance and that affects the guages reading. It is the same issue with the factory water temp guages. That is unless you step up and go to a late model 5 volt PWM sensor and guage set up. But then you will need some sort of computing power.
That seems like a lot of effort to avoid a maybe leak that most likely could be avoided by cutting the factory steel tubing off at the old ferule and correctly installing a new ferule. But that is only my opinion. |
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