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Three dead gauges, FUEL TEMP OIL

Started by rikubot, September 04, 2015, 06:30:31 PM

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rikubot

Hello you beautiful people.

I am having an issue with my fuel, temp, and oil pressure gauges. I have tested them AND the circuit board outside of the dash, and they seemed to work. The bulbs lit up, and the gauges went to 3/4 full when juiced with 2 double A batteries. I got a brand-spankin' new dash harness from M&K in there, and a new engine harness as well. Oh, and a BRAND NEW solid state voltage regulator from RT-Engineering. I am about 85% sure the sending units work, as they did before I operated on my dash and did a triple bypass surgery with the new harness. I snipped out some of the worst home-made wiring known to man. Any guesses or advice is very much appreciated. Am I missing something? Should I just buy new senders for temp and oil? I can't think of anything else it would be. Can I test my senders? Also, there's a wiring coming out of my fuel sender that isn't attached to anything, is this the ground? If so, where do I bolt it? Let me hear your thoughts!

-Mike
'69 Charger, 440/727

XH29N0G

Someone on here will be able to tell, but I bet there are ways to check the temp and oil senders before buying new ones.  I have not looked into how they work, but it could have to do with resistance and this would be possible to test with an ohm meter.  The main reason I responded was to mention that if you do not have a factory service manual or a wiring diagram, that you probably want to get one and trace out the various wires.  I never traced out wires until having this car, and while it takes patience, it really helps in diagnosing these sorts of problems.  
Who in their right mind would say

"The science should not stand in the way of this."? 

Science is just observation and hypothesis.  Policy stands in the way.........

Or maybe it protects us. 

I suppose it depends on the specific case.....

69wannabe

Sounds like you instrument cluster voltage regulator bit the dust. Mine died a couple of year's back and I was able to replace it on the back of the cluster without removing the whole cluster. Actually you may be better of to replace it with a new solid state instrument voltage regulator/limiter. There is a way to check it to see if it is good or bad when you get it off the cluster but I haven't checked one in so long I don't remember how to check it. I have a few of these in a drawer out in my shop if your's is bad but they are like the original style. Maybe Pete will chime in and post how to check it so you can check it and see what you got and so I can check the one's I got and see if they are any good or not. I can send you one of these if you need it but like I said earlier it may be a good time to upgrade to a solid state style one.  :yesnod:

rikubot

Quote from: 69wannabe on September 04, 2015, 09:18:11 PM
Sounds like you instrument cluster voltage regulator bit the dust. Mine died a couple of year's back and I was able to replace it on the back of the cluster without removing the whole cluster. Actually you may be better of to replace it with a new solid state instrument voltage regulator/limiter. There is a way to check it to see if it is good or bad when you get it off the cluster but I haven't checked one in so long I don't remember how to check it. I have a few of these in a drawer out in my shop if your's is bad but they are like the original style. Maybe Pete will chime in and post how to check it so you can check it and see what you got and so I can check the one's I got and see if they are any good or not. I can send you one of these if you need it but like I said earlier it may be a good time to upgrade to a solid state style one.  :yesnod:

Thank you very much Wannabe I really appreciate the offer. That's what my first thinking was too, so I went ahead and got that new Solid State regulator. I was 99% sure I had my issue pinned to that regulator and I got the new one in the mail today, installed it, and boom, same place as before but out $60. I'm still glad I bought it, but I'm going crazy not knowing why they still don't work.
'69 Charger, 440/727

A383Wing

wondering if you have a bad pin on the printed circuit board

rikubot

Quote from: XH29N0G on September 04, 2015, 08:08:32 PM
Someone on here will be able to tell, but I bet there are ways to check the temp and oil senders before buying new ones.  I have not looked into how they work, but it could have to do with resistance and this would be possible to test with an ohm meter.  The main reason I responded was to mention that if you do not have a factory service manual or a wiring diagram, that you probably want to get one and trace out the various wires.  I never traces out wires until having this car, and while it takes patience, it really helps in diagnosing these sorts of problems. 

XH,

Yes sir, I can't live without them right now haha. The service manual says "faulty voltage limiter" or "open circuit on battery side (input of limiter)" if I have the three dead gauges. Seems the black 12v feed wire is powering the limiter as the red indicator light is blinking when ignition is turned on. I find it pretty hard to believe all three senders don't work (they worked before), so the lack of function blows my mind. Damn near has me watching the Kardashians to punish myself. I read that the gauges are slow to read in these old cars, so about how long do they take to show levels? What could the "open circuit on battery side" be? I have a brand new engine harness plugged into a brand new dash harness, plugged into a tested circuit board and tested gauges, with a brand new solid state voltage limiter. WHAT AM I MISSING???? IT'S DEVIL VOODOO I TELL YA!!!!

Thanks for the help Mopar Bro
'69 Charger, 440/727

Dino

The solid state regulator is a must, don't worry about that part anymore.  I had all 3 gauges fry when my stock limiter died about 2 hours after installing my restored cluster, not fun.

The gauges work and the likely hood of all senders to be dead is pretty slim.  Either the pins on the circut board are not what they used to be, or there's no power going to the board.  I'd solder the pins to the board first EVEN if it tested out okay on the bench.  Mine did the same.  Eventually I ran out of options, cleaned the board again, and spent a few minutes soldering.  Haven't had a problem since.

Where's this wire coming out of the fuel sender exactly?  One wire should attach to the little rod on the sender itself.  The ground is a clamp that goes from the sender to the metal fuel line by bridging the rubber hose.

Gauuges start moving within two seconds.  You have the cluster grounded to the dash frame right?
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

Quote from: A383Wing on September 04, 2015, 09:38:21 PM
wondering if you have a bad pin on the printed circuit board

I like how you're thinking, however I did check the pins for each separate gauge using the two AA battery trick, so I figured those three were cool. The black 12v feed coming from the harness I checked with a makeshift test light, and the new IVR4 Voltage Limiter has a lil' red light that blinks when it's working (assuming meaning it's getting the 12v feed from the circuit board), so I figure its pin is working as well. The pin that runs the lights worked as well, although it's not real important right now.
'69 Charger, 440/727

Dino

Quote from: rikubot on September 04, 2015, 10:03:45 PM
Quote from: A383Wing on September 04, 2015, 09:38:21 PM
wondering if you have a bad pin on the printed circuit board

I like how you're thinking, however I did check the pins for each separate gauge using the two AA battery trick, so I figured those three were cool. The black 12v feed coming from the harness I checked with a makeshift test light, and the new IVR4 Voltage Limiter has a lil' red light that blinks when it's working (assuming meaning it's getting the 12v feed from the circuit board), so I figure its pin is working as well. The pin that runs the lights worked as well, although it's not real important right now.

That's how it was on mine, all tested fine on the bench yet once the heavy connector was pushed into place, different story.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

Quote from: Dino on September 04, 2015, 09:45:58 PM
The solid state regulator is a must, don't worry about that part anymore.  I had all 3 gauges fry when my stock limiter died about 2 hours after installing my restored cluster, not fun.

The gauges work and the likely hood of all senders to be dead is pretty slim.  Either the pins on the circut board are not what they used to be, or there's no power going to the board.  I'd solder the pins to the board first EVEN if it tested out okay on the bench.  Mine did the same.  Eventually I ran out of options, cleaned the board again, and spent a few minutes soldering.  Haven't had a problem since.

Where's this wire coming out of the fuel sender exactly?  One wire should attach to the little rod on the sender itself.  The ground is a clamp that goes from the sender to the metal fuel line by bridging the rubber hose.

Gauuges start moving within two seconds.  You have the cluster grounded to the dash frame right?

Next time I pull the cluster out I'll be soldering those pins. I don't want to chance it. Tell me if I'm right in thinking that the power to the circuit is good if the red light on IVR4 is blinking? This is where I get VERY confused. The 12v power definitely IS coming from the black wire, it lit my lil #57 bulb up pretty good. I made a test light out of an old turn signal bulb and socket. Seems to work ok.  

The wire looks like it's coming out of the hole where the fuel line is coming out. I'll get a picture tomorrow in the daylight. That whole area on my car is pretty molested and I have a hard time making it right with nothing to look at. I recently pulled a non-working electric pump off it and had to franken-hose my fuel line. And yes sir, cluster is grounded.
'69 Charger, 440/727

Dino

Yes the blinking led indicates power to the IVR.  That doesn't mean it's sending it to the gauges though.

I'd love to see a picture of that fuel sender wire.   :yesnod:
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

Quote from: Dino on September 04, 2015, 10:17:41 PM
Yes the blinking led indicates power to the IVR.  That doesn't mean it's sending it to the gauges though.

I'd love to see a picture of that fuel sender wire.   :yesnod:

Dang it, you're right. So that could mean that the little copper thing that the bottom pin of the regulator plugs into may not be making contact with the board. I knew I should have pulled those, cleaned the contacts, and put a little dielectric grease on 'em. Maybe even dropped some solder on em. Do I need flux for that? I have a hard time with solder cuz my gun is crap.

Ok I will get a good photo of that area ASAP. I know the ground has been tinkered with because the end loop thing looks fairly new and colored like the aftermarket ones.
'69 Charger, 440/727

Dino

Careful with those big solder guns.  You may just want to pick up a Harbor Freight or Lowes solder iron for this, its cheap and will do the job.  Just make sure you tin the tip first.  Yes use flux unless the solder itself has flux in it.  Make sure the pins are snug, I was able to twist one or two on mine and they snugged right up.  Make sure the board is clean and solder away.  Do not spend more than a few seconds on each pin.  If the solder doesn't flow it's a gun issue, don't fry the board.  Solder both sides and you'll be good to go.  There's good videos on youtube to do small electronics soldering if you need them.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

I've got a little 30 watt thing I got from wal mart when my Xbox needed a new disc drive. It doesn't work great but it should get the job done. Once I get that all soldered up and it doesn't work, I'm totally out of ideas. Then I'm just gonna have to try sweet talkin' to her under a full moon haha
'69 Charger, 440/727

rikubot

And I want to add that I really appreciate your help Dino! I see you on here a lot helping people out and its pretty damn cool. Thanks again good sir  :cheers:
'69 Charger, 440/727

Dino

My pleasure.  It would probably be better if I actually knew what he heck I was talking about.   :lol:
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

Haha you sure could have fooled me! "Fake it til you make it!"
'69 Charger, 440/727

rikubot

I just thought of some possibly valuable information: One of the tabs where my cluster bolts to the dash has been cut off the dash itself to make room for the abomination that was my old gauge set. Its the tab that the top right screw goes into on the cluster. When I mount it up, I screw in all four remaining screws. Do you think this would need to be there to ground my cluster completely? I wouldn't think so because the turn indicators work but I just wanted to hear everyone's thoughts. It IS in the area of my problem.
'69 Charger, 440/727

Dino

Although you could have a bad ground, one screw through the frame should do it.  When in doubt add a lead wth alligator clips for testing.  Just make sure the ground is on clean metal.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

I got up under the car this morning to take a pic of that wire coming out of the tank. It looks like it is coming out of the same hole as the fuel line. Its flat, then is spliced into traditional insulated wire. Also, I just had a thought, If the sending units were the problem, wouldn't the gauges be pegged all the way up? Especially if the gauges were getting power from the 5v feed out of the regulator? Don't the senders give off a signal based off resistance? Or at least doesn't the fuel sender?

Sorry the pic is terrible. Iphone 4.

'69 Charger, 440/727

rikubot

Here's the end of the wire coming out of my fuel sending unit.
'69 Charger, 440/727

Bronzedodge

Something is odd there.  The 1st pic looks like the ground strap, which should bridge the short rubber line from the pickup.  Something wrong with your ground strap perhaps?   :scratchchin:
Mopar forever!

Dino

Yep, first pic is the ground strap but it's really short and you have a ot of rubber hose there for some reason.  It looks like they just bridged al that with a wire. Without that ground the gauge would not work.  It's a bit messy and redoing it would not be a bad idea, but in essence it should do the job.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

rikubot

Thanks guys, I knew something was fishy.

What happened was someone had installed an electric fuel pump there, and it quit working, so I pulled the sucker off. I used rubber hose to patch the missing fuel line (didn't know any better). So should I just clamp that ground strap to the fuel line? Or bolt it to the body?
'69 Charger, 440/727

Pete in NH

Quote from: rikubot on September 11, 2015, 01:14:41 AM
Thanks guys, I knew something was fishy.

What happened was someone had installed an electric fuel pump there, and it quit working, so I pulled the sucker off. I used rubber hose to patch the missing fuel line (didn't know any better). So should I just clamp that ground strap to the fuel line? Or bolt it to the body?

Tie wrapping the wire terminal to the fuel line isn't really going to work. You want to run a wire from the sending unit metal to the body ground itself. I would use something nice and flexible like a piece of ground braid.

The factory used a metal strap with a clip on either end that bridged the rubber fuel line section and then depended on the fuel line mounting clips into the frame for a ground. A direct ground would be more reliable.

Also, I would ground that "tab" you talked about a few posts back on the one mounting screw of the dash printed circuit board. It can't hurt and might be your problem of the three gauges not working. Bad connections between the pins on the circuit board connector and the circuit board foil as mentioned is also a common problem.