Temperature guage
Moderators: Cal_Gary, T. Highway, Monkey Man, robi
Temperature guage
Something not right with my replacement temp guage and sender. I have wired it up as per manual but after a little while the actual guage gets really warm!
Any ideas what I could have done wrong?
I have live wire to one terminal of guage then wire from the other terminal to the sender.
Stuart
Any ideas what I could have done wrong?
I have live wire to one terminal of guage then wire from the other terminal to the sender.
Stuart
My Deep Thoughts
I think one wire should go to ground? (inside the dash?) 

Bruce,
1953 M-37 w/ow
Retired Again
Keep Em Rollin'
VMVA
1953 M-37 w/ow
Retired Again
Keep Em Rollin'
VMVA
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- 1SG
- Posts: 2832
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- Location: Norwood, NC
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Re: Temperature guage
You have it wired correctly, there is no ground wire, the sender is grounded via the engine block, the gauge is grounded through the case to the panel. You may want to check for a proper ground, however there is no dedicated ground wire.M37UK wrote:Something not right with my replacement temp guage and sender. I have wired it up as per manual but after a little while the actual guage gets really warm!
Any ideas what I could have done wrong?
I have live wire to one terminal of guage then wire from the other terminal to the sender.
Stuart
Charles Talbert
www.mseriesrebuild.com
www.mseriesrebuild.com
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- 1SG
- Posts: 2832
- Joined: Sat Oct 20, 2007 4:35 am
- Location: Norwood, NC
- Contact:
Yes you must have the correct leads to the correct terminals or you can have a major melt down. Carter has posted some very good easy to understand descriptions & diagrams that you can follow according to which guage you need to troubleshoot. Check that out & let us know if you need further assistance.M37UK wrote:Charles, does it matter which terminal connects to the sender and which terminal connects to live?
Charles Talbert
www.mseriesrebuild.com
www.mseriesrebuild.com
Connectors: which is which?
Yes, it does. One is for 24V in, the other comes from the sender. Plug it in backwards and you will release the mystic smoke that makes all electronics work (and perhaps start a small fire, too). If you have the metal connectors (Douglas), there is no way to mess this up. With the rubber (Packard), it should also be rather clear: one connector is male, the other female. I'll try to rememberM37UK wrote:Had a look at the guide but it doesnt actually state which gage terminal is for which connection.
I presume it doesnt matter which one you use.
Stuart

I got so frustrated finding a gauge/sensor combination that worked, that I'm switching over to a mechanical gauge. Wish I'd seen the gauge testing stuff earlier - I've already made the investment in the mechanical one.

You can trust your mother, but you can't trust your ground.
Mechanical Gauge
I have a Stuart Warner 701-2185 gauge. It looks original, but is expensive. This one has a 48" tube on it - they also come 72" (701-2184) an 144" (701-2182).
I see your problem on the inputs for the gauge. Looking at the gauge from the back with the gauge upright, my (dead) electric gauge has the female socket on the left and the male socket on the right. One of these gets a constant 24V from the spider harness. Unfortunately I've forgotten which one.
I'll try to remember to check after I go skiing. In the mean time, maybe there's someone else who knows??
I see your problem on the inputs for the gauge. Looking at the gauge from the back with the gauge upright, my (dead) electric gauge has the female socket on the left and the male socket on the right. One of these gets a constant 24V from the spider harness. Unfortunately I've forgotten which one.

You can trust your mother, but you can't trust your ground.
Stuart,
Looking at your photo, notice the rubber recepticle on the left has raised lines running on the length of the outside. On my M38A1 OP gauge, this is the side that the sender plugs in. The rest of my gauges are Douglas, so no help there.
I remember trying to figure these plugs out before, and thinking it odd that the hot wire (from the spider harness) didn't go to the recepticle with the ridges. My mind wanted to put hot to the "marked" terminal.
HTH
Dave
Looking at your photo, notice the rubber recepticle on the left has raised lines running on the length of the outside. On my M38A1 OP gauge, this is the side that the sender plugs in. The rest of my gauges are Douglas, so no help there.
I remember trying to figure these plugs out before, and thinking it odd that the hot wire (from the spider harness) didn't go to the recepticle with the ridges. My mind wanted to put hot to the "marked" terminal.
HTH
Dave
Dave Ostlund
1941 WC9
1952 M37 W/W
1953 M38A1
M116
RTFB
1941 WC9
1952 M37 W/W
1953 M38A1
M116
RTFB
the gauges are made to hook up correctly into the wiring harness. wire # 33 should go to the sender at the back of the engines head. the other wire is # 27 and comes from the dash spider assembly. the connectors are male/ female with the wire # 33 being a male side connector. the douglas connectors should allow these wires to be hooked up only in the right direction. here is a schematic that might be helpful ( hope it works)
http://m37.crwdesigns.com/m37wiring.pdf
http://m37.crwdesigns.com/m37wiring.pdf