<VV> Re: re;thermister

Mike Kost vairmike at sbcglobal.net
Thu Jul 6 09:31:47 EDT 2006


You might try putting it in the oven. You can let it stabilize at 
various temperatures and see what it reads. Use high temp wire!

Mike Kost

Michael Kovacs wrote:

>I checked the continuity to the guage. It pegs at 600 when  the wire is grounded. Then "bench tested" all of thermisters. They will also peg the needle when carefully heated with a propane torch. A match did nothing, the hair dryer did nothing.
>   
>   I'll need a high speed cruise to see if there is something to be concerned with. I'm really just looking for a data base for comparison while driving. 
>
>tom zimmermann <s10birdman1966 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>  btw,since you've got a few,put one in the right head and compare the gauge readings...a thin coat of neversieze on the thds...unless you don't want to risk shearing the snap sw off...don't ask...Tom..//
>
>Michael Kovacs <kovacsmj at sbcglobal.net> wrote:     Tom, 
>   About 5k at room,  and just touching the bulb will start to lower the resistance. I checked all of them and will pick one. Thanks. I'll first check the continuity of the car wiring by grounding the thermistor wire before replacing anything. 
>   
>   Like they taught us in the USAF, check the simple stuff first, like a burned out warning light, before trying to find out what is wrong with the circuit.
>
>tom zimmermann <s10birdman1966 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>  ..afaik,resistance should be 3,000 to 6,000 ohms at room temp,approx...I wouldn't apply a flame to it,the hairdryer method would be safest...can you hook it to a dash gauge,out of car? Tom..//
>    
>---------------------------------
>  
>
>MIKE KOVACS
>  
>


-- 
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.394 / Virus Database: 268.9.9/382 - Release Date: 7/4/2006



More information about the VirtualVairs mailing list