I've got a never-meant-for-USA Caterpillar excavator that, just as they told me would happen, is more than a small challenge to repair, due to lack of both English documentation and USA-friendly part-numbers. The electrical temp gauge definitely falls under this description.
I've utterly given up on finding a compatible or the correct original temp sender (old one reads "open", so gauge is always pegged on 'Hot'). Nowhere can I find a listing of these devices by their physical or electrical characteristics - it's always "make, model, year," and not "ohms, thread-size, length."
What's inside these senders? I'd assumed thermistors, chosen per the OEM's design. But when I look at available thermistors from a random online sampling, seems like the lowest resistance is about 3K ohms. This makes no sense for a replacement in my application, because, using test-resistors to replace the sender, I find I need something along these lines:
Cold (25C): 43 ohms
Hot (110C-ish): 0 ohms.
My plan was to (really) drill out the existing one, and epoxy a new thermistor in place. And I'd do it in a heartbeat, gladly, to get past all the screwing around I've done with trying to find the "right" original sender replacement.
It could also be something "went wrong with" the gauge, but it's built into a cluster ('cluster' is right!) and so that wouldn't be a simple swap to replace.
And it's consistent, if that matters, in the 43ohm - zero-ohms range testing, months apart.
So is there some different variable-resistance sensor of some kind in these senders, then? Any suggestions for a replacement component, along the "drill the old one out" lines?
I've utterly given up on finding a compatible or the correct original temp sender (old one reads "open", so gauge is always pegged on 'Hot'). Nowhere can I find a listing of these devices by their physical or electrical characteristics - it's always "make, model, year," and not "ohms, thread-size, length."
What's inside these senders? I'd assumed thermistors, chosen per the OEM's design. But when I look at available thermistors from a random online sampling, seems like the lowest resistance is about 3K ohms. This makes no sense for a replacement in my application, because, using test-resistors to replace the sender, I find I need something along these lines:
Cold (25C): 43 ohms
Hot (110C-ish): 0 ohms.
My plan was to (really) drill out the existing one, and epoxy a new thermistor in place. And I'd do it in a heartbeat, gladly, to get past all the screwing around I've done with trying to find the "right" original sender replacement.
It could also be something "went wrong with" the gauge, but it's built into a cluster ('cluster' is right!) and so that wouldn't be a simple swap to replace.
And it's consistent, if that matters, in the 43ohm - zero-ohms range testing, months apart.
So is there some different variable-resistance sensor of some kind in these senders, then? Any suggestions for a replacement component, along the "drill the old one out" lines?