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Old 11-14-2004, 01:23 PM   #1
Red68
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Position of stock temp guage

I recently rewired my entire truck with the painless kit. It works great however, I have a question, prior to rewiring my truck the stock temp guage did not work (maybe because of the wiring or printed circuit panel) so I had an after market guage.

Now after my the engine warms up the temp guage sits at the 1st line and sometimes creaps up to the "orange" area. Is this normal? I checked the temp of several places on the engine block with a laser temp sensor and it ranged between 180 and 200. I did not have a overheating problem prior to rewiring the truck.

Thanks for any advice.
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1968 C10 flatbed 307 w/ 4 spd manual (dads old ride)
1936 1/2 tn pickup, 400sb 350 turbo (partially restored)
1949 1/2 tn, needs complete restore (future project)
1969 Chevy impala 4 dr no post (wifes future car)
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Old 11-14-2004, 03:51 PM   #2
Longhorn Man
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A few possabilities here, the first sounding like you have a 160 - 180 degree t-stat. The guage works off a graduated scale, and will not read quite right with the cooler t-stat. (designed for a 195 stat) I know these numbers don't seem like much, but on a graduated scale, it could be quite a bit.
Is there thread tape on your sending unit? Sometimes the tape can hinder the grounding effect, and cause a low reading. Since it is a pipe thread fitting, no sealant is needed.
You may well just have a bum guage.

Last edited by Longhorn Man; 11-15-2004 at 07:10 PM.
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Old 11-14-2004, 07:18 PM   #3
Stocker
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My factory gauge reads well below halfway, more like about 1/3 from the left when at full operating temp.
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Old 11-14-2004, 10:04 PM   #4
71-longbed
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mine sits a 1/4 inch above the small line at operating temp
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Old 11-14-2004, 10:50 PM   #5
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and before i swapped out my intake, carb and t-stat my gauge would never read about 1/2 on the gauge now it reads like its burning up all the time... i guess its my gauge or its the t-stat throwing it off...
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Old 11-15-2004, 12:09 AM   #6
Longhorn Man
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burning all the time? you mean it is pegged out as soon as you turn on the ignition?
If so, trace the green wire from the sending unit in the head to the harness bulhead. Odds are, it is grounded out somewhere...like melted to an exhaust manifold/header.
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Old 11-15-2004, 06:04 PM   #7
Red68
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Longhorn Man, thanks for the reply, I do not recall what temp my thermostat is I thought is was 190, could be wrong. I started out with teflon tape on the threads, after a conversation with a mech friend I fixed that. Still the same. I hate to buy a new temp guage not knowing if the one I have is bad. Is there any way to check the guage?
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1968 C10 LWB 327 bored 40 over, RHS heads, KB pistons, Eagle rods, Edlebrock carb & intake
1968 C10 flatbed 307 w/ 4 spd manual (dads old ride)
1936 1/2 tn pickup, 400sb 350 turbo (partially restored)
1949 1/2 tn, needs complete restore (future project)
1969 Chevy impala 4 dr no post (wifes future car)
2010 GMC Serria 4x4 crew, leveling kit
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Old 11-15-2004, 07:10 PM   #8
Longhorn Man
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If you could measure the resistance at certian temperatures, knowing what OHM reading should translate into what reading on teh guage, then you could find out how acurate your guage really is.
Personally, I'd hunt down a used temp guage before doing all that jive. (in reality, since I don't trust 35 yr old guages, I'd replace them all with aftermarket...like I have on both my trucks)
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