On to the next problem. High cooling temp. The water pump is 2 or 3 years old with less than 1000 miles. Previous owner installed it. I have flushed the system, burped it twice now, new thermostat, new temperature sending unit, and cleaned my very dirty ground from the motor to the frame. I took it on about a 2 hour drive where I flogged it pretty hard on some twisty roads. The temp stayed at 195 or a little above. Once I had to stop and sit a few times the temp got to the mark after 195. The fans would kick in and the temp would come down to almost the middle. The drive home it stayed closer to the mark after 195. Today with it sitting idling it got close to the top of the scale before the fans came on. When I saw what it was doing I checked several spots with my IR thermometer. The highest reading I got was 198. I checked every where. The middle of the V, the bace of the heads, all the water pipes, even where the temp sensor is, nothing was near that hot. At the radiator the inlet would be about 195 and the exit about 170. Once the temp at the sensor got to about 198 the fans would kick in. I trust my IR readings. I don't think the car is getting hot. One time I wiggled the wire attached to the temp sensor and the temp reading came down. One of the reasons I changed the sender. when I had it apart I check the resistance on all the wires that run through the common plugs. I did this because the oil pressure gage is interment. Next I will pull the instrument cluster and see what I find. Does anyone know of a chart with the resistance at the sending unit? I think I have a wiring problem. Any help would be great. sorry for the length. Lee
The tachs are not very accurate, the speedometers are not very accurate, the oil pressure gauges are not very accurate. In my experience the water temp gauge you can pretty much bet your life on. Reading temps on the outside of the hose or casting isnt a worthless exercise but its the next best thing. Two really bad things for an aluminum engine, overheating it and cronically almost overheating it. It will turn the aluminum soft and the motor will become garage art. You are getting it into the territory I tell my clients to pull over and park it. My suggestion is stop driving it until its figured out and fixed. It will not fix itself.
Verify the connections (esp on the ground side) in the instrument cluster. You can get feedback from a flaky gauge into another gauge, causing one gauge to read high, the other low. Someone here described how they took the cluster out and resoldered a bunch of wires and everything worked well afterwards. Doug
Not all temp sensors are equal. The OEM sensor is the way to go. The cheap ones, often cross refereneced to a Volkwagn application, are of dubious quality. I had replaced with a cheap one, and the fans did not come on til too hot. A new OEM one (actually old stock in the F yellow box), and all is as it should be again. Also, put some Redline Water Wetter in the coolant. It really does work, takes the temp down a bit by increasing the heat transfer from coolant to the metal in the system.
Is the 195 hash (the middle of the gauge) not a proper operating temp for a warmed-up car? I assumed it was. Check your coolant tank cap - if it's worn and not sealing properly, it can lead to an overheating car. If it's the lower-bar version, it might be worth replacing it with a fresh, higher-bar one. The caps do fail more often than you'd think, and if the system isn't holding proper pressure, it significantly affects cooling.
I would really be interested to hear a fact based engineering explanation of how "feedback" (and reciprocal feedback to boot) occurs from one gauge to another, even though they are on separate circuits. Most gauges are fed 12 and grounded via a variable resistor (aka the sender) to provide the calibrated resistance which registers on the calibrated gauge, so not sure what grounds you are referring to. Overall your assertion makes no sense to me, but I'm always happy to listen to verified factual information.