Where to get good gauges? - Page 2
 

Where to get good gauges?

Started by technomadia, July 05, 2013, 08:34:09 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

RJ

Quote from: technomadia on July 06, 2013, 03:40:22 PM
I've been testing, and I think the sender may be functional - but the old gauge mounted on the side of the tank is dead. Perfect opportunity to wire the sender to a new gauge on the dash!

Chris -

Have you checked the switch next to the fuel gauge?  My 4106's gauge was wired thru a momentary-on switch - you had to hold it up for the gauge to work.

Being kind of an ancient techno-geek myself, I think those Dakota Digital gauges are really neat. . .

Over the years, Isspro has been mentioned often as the "go to" source for instrumentation, with most busnuts extremely satisfied with their product and customer service.

IIRC, you don't have the OEM dashboard in Zephyr, which in itself, is a huge improvement.  After the wonderful industrial design of the 4104's instrument panel and driver's LH side switch clusters, the OEM 4106's was one place where GM really stubbed their big toe. 

FWIW & HTH. . .

;)
1992 Prevost XL Vantaré Conversion M1001907 8V92T/HT-755 (DDEC/ATEC)
2003 VW Jetta TDI Sportwagon "Towed"
Cheney WA (when home)

technomadia

Wait.. if we get a fuel gauge.. does that mean I've lost my job calculating the fuel and mileage estimates???  I'm being outsourced by technology!!

And I will have you know.. my calculations proved to be with in .04% accuracy to the testing Chris did today on the feed. Booyah.

- Cherie
Cherie and Chris / Bus tour: www.technomadia.com/zephyr
Full-time 'Technomads' since 2006 (technology enabled nomads)

sdc53

I made an observation today when parking after driving home - with my marker lights on, my temp gauge reads higher.  I happened to be looking at the temp gauge when I switched them off and saw the needle move lower.  Quite annoying, that gained me at least 5 degrees of cooling, heh.  The voltage drop with the markers must cause this.  I hope that doesn't mean I need to redo the whole run when I upgrade my gauge.

When gauge shopping, I've been wanting one where the sender uses a single wire rather than the two or three I've seen some of them call for so that I can utilize the existing wire.  Hoping that plan wasn't destroyed today.  I'm a bit concerned about the accuracy of 35'+ of crusty old wire now.
Scott
Gladstone, OR
1969 PD4107

technomadia

Quote from: RJ on July 06, 2013, 08:58:38 PM
Have you checked the switch next to the fuel gauge?  My 4106's gauge was wired thru a momentary-on switch - you had to hold it up for the gauge to work.

Yep - I think we have the same setup. The gauge is mounted next to the filler hole, and engages via a momentary switch.

The switch is broken off and dead, and the inline fuse was burnt out too.  When I disconnected the wires to the fuel level sender, I measured 16.1 ohms on it, which if the sender uses a 0-30ohm range (a common type) indicates 54% full.  Which happens to exactly match Cherie's calculated estimate based upon our miles driven since our last fillup.

When I bypass the switch and hook the old gauge back up, it reads slightly over 1/4 tank - a level that seems to be wrong based upon our calculations.

If only I had a 50 gallon drum of diesel I could pump into the tank to get a sense for how the sender resistance responds....

But - the SpeedHut.com fuel gauges are fully programmable to work with any sender, so if the sender really is working - I think I may have a solid solution in the works.

Right now we are leaning towards doing a full dash replacement with gauges from SpeedHut. I like the quad-guage instrument bank, and the GPS speedo.

Cheers!

   - Chris
Cherie and Chris / Bus tour: www.technomadia.com/zephyr
Full-time 'Technomads' since 2006 (technology enabled nomads)

belfert

For fuel I really the senders from Centroid Products.  They have no moving parts and are dead on accurate.  You measure the depth of your tank and they custom make the sender.  A regular sender with a float is very hard to calibrate and can rust up if the tank isn't kept full.  I had ordered a new sender from MCI for my bus and they just sent a generic float type sender that I would have had to figure out how to calibrate it.  I never even tried to install the float type sensor.

I know that I can't use the bottom 20 gallons of fuel in my tank (from experience) so I had my sender cut so empty should be 20 gallons left.  When I fill up the number of gallons used matches the fuel gauge very well.
Brian Elfert - 1995 Dina Viaggio 1000 Series 60/B500 - 75% done but usable - Minneapolis, MN

luvrbus

Faria gauges are the M/B of gauges IMO the 200 buck fuel manger is a neat addition instead of a troublesome fuel gauge
Life is short drink the good wine first

belfert

Quote from: luvrbus on July 07, 2013, 07:06:21 AM
Faria gauges are the M/B of gauges IMO the 200 buck fuel manger is a neat addition instead of a troublesome fuel gauge

Clifford, can you elaborate on the fuel manager a little bit like who makes it?  I assume it probably measures gallons consumed?  Those Faria gauges aren't all that expensive.
Brian Elfert - 1995 Dina Viaggio 1000 Series 60/B500 - 75% done but usable - Minneapolis, MN

technomadia

Quote from: luvrbus on July 07, 2013, 07:06:21 AM
Faria gauges are the M/B of gauges IMO the 200 buck fuel manger is a neat addition instead of a troublesome fuel gauge

A real fuel manager would be awesome - but searching for the Faria Fuel Manager, it seems to be gasoline engines only:

"The Faria fuel manager gauge is designed to monitor fuel flow to the engine only, this unit does not take into account fuel returned to the tank and cannot therefore be used with diesel engines."

A diesel fuel manager would need to meter both the outlfow and fuel return lines - do you know of something like this?

Cheers,

   - Chris
Cherie and Chris / Bus tour: www.technomadia.com/zephyr
Full-time 'Technomads' since 2006 (technology enabled nomads)

luvrbus

mine works good with the by pass I have had it for 3 years it's pretty it accurate
Life is short drink the good wine first

technomadia

Quote from: luvrbus on July 07, 2013, 09:08:19 AM
mine works good with the by pass I have had it for 3 years it's pretty it accurate

Sounds very cool - can you share how you have this plumbed and how the bypass works?

I've been googling for Diesel-compatible fuel managers that calculate usage with two sensors - subtracting the outflow from the inflow to determine how much has been burned. In the marine world, the gold standard seems to be Floscan, which makes some great diesel engine fuel monitoring instrumentation. But even the cheapest discounted Floscan kit I have seen starts at near $700.

If there is a way to make the Faria work, that is intriguing.

Cheers!

  - Chris
Cherie and Chris / Bus tour: www.technomadia.com/zephyr
Full-time 'Technomads' since 2006 (technology enabled nomads)

chessie4905

  How about a military surplus altimeter? Although my latest gps has this built in. Probably a cell phone app is avail to.
GMC h8h 649#028 (4905)
Pennsylvania-central

technomadia

Quote from: chessie4905 on July 07, 2013, 10:34:50 AM
  How about a military surplus altimeter? Although my latest gps has this built in. Probably a cell phone app is avail to.

The Speedhut GPS Speedometer we are planning to order also has an altimeter readout, amount many other things (even auto-calculates 0-60 times and quarter mile performance).  But a big old military style unit would indeed look cool.

And yes - there are apps that can give you altitude and speed, and even G-force readouts for cornering.

I'm actually freeing up space on the dash so that I can have an iPad mount for glass-cockpit / moving map use.

  - Chris
Cherie and Chris / Bus tour: www.technomadia.com/zephyr
Full-time 'Technomads' since 2006 (technology enabled nomads)

Purplewillie

Not military , but I have an old school compass and an altimeter
Mark & Char
1976 P8M4905a 8v71 v730
British Columbia Canada

Purplewillie

Mark & Char
1976 P8M4905a 8v71 v730
British Columbia Canada

Gordie Allen

I bought a complete custom gauge panel with 8 gauges and 8 switches from http://www.custominstrumentpanels.com/  
I would suggest you at least check it out.  Custom cut panel in your choice of colors.  Back-lit switch labels.  All gauges are pre-wired and all wires labeled as well.  All sending units  included.  Telltale for directional, High Idle, high beam, oil pressure, etc. Mine cost $1000.00.  
Mine has:
SWITCHES:                       GAUGES:
Engine on                          Speedometer
Start (momentary)             Tach
High Idle                           Water Temp
Reverse (momentary)        Oil Pressure
Headlights                        Oil Temp
Markers                            Fuel Temp
Emergency Flashers           Voltage
Backup lights                    Air Pressure
Gordie
Augusta, MI
1956 4104
DD 671