ACT gauge???

vristang

15 Year Member
Mar 31, 2005
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Seattle
Can a standard aftermarket temp gauge (autometer or whatever) be hooked up to the ACT sensor in the lower intake. I am curious what the temps are.

Has anyone done this?

I may put in a lifter valley windage tray, but want to know what the intake temps are before doing the modification, for the comparison.
Anyone seen dyno results/temp data for this?
 
Jason, that is an interesting question. The real smart folks will know, but I will chime in just in case....... (I know you have to be sick of me replying). :D

I think there would be calibration issues. THe ACT has a thermistor so the gauge would need to be cal'd for that. It would be easier to simply mount the gauge's dedicated sending unit as a stand-alone.

Let's see what the smart ones say. Interesting idea man - you always have the wheels turning upstairs. :nice:
 
vristang said:
Nope, not yet. :nice:

Maybe it would be easier to just read ACT output with a voltmeter, then do a conversion/calibration later?
:cheers:

I think that would be the cheap way to do it (it is the same way TwEECers infer temps, as I recall). Jrichker has posted the voltage and resistance values for the ECT/ACT (very similar sensors) in case that helps. I cant recall how large a spread there is between values to know if a digital voltmeter would be effective in real-world driving. I think it could work.

Good luck!
 
According to Probst (p84) the ACT and the ECT are calibrated to the same VREF output.

So now the question is...
Are there any aftermarket gauges that can give accurate output for the stock coolant temp sensor?

Just thinking out loud
 
JT- you beat me to the post. I gotta start hitting the submit reply button quicker:rolleyes:

Don-thanks for the excel file. It gives the voltmeter calibration info that I was just about to ask for. :nice:

I should be able to splice into the ACT lead near the computer, correct? Maybe I will give this a try this weekend.

Always a pleasure guys!
:Word:
 
The input impedance of the autometer gauge must be high impedance to work properly. Do you have a schematic or specs, what is it's transfer function it expects? Any info on the autometer sending unit? Sounds like it isn't compatible with the stock sending unit?

Good Luck, Don
 
Holy Revival!!!

So I did end up using a voltmeter for a little while. I hooked it up to the ACT, ECT, and TPS in the kickpanel near the computer. Easy to do.:)

Reading voltage was a little weird at first but started to make sense after a week or so. :nice:

Does anyone know the output scale of the temp gauge sender? If it is on the same 0-5v scale then maybe a switch could be used to alternate between coolant temp and Air charge temp, through the stock coolant temp gauge?


jason
 
I've thought about doing this very same thing. For a lab in college, we used operational amplifiers to modify the voltage output of strain gages to display the acutal load in Newtons placed on the experimental setup. Going to have to dig up the old lab books! Anyone tried this with op-amps before?
 
67coupe said:
I've thought about doing this very same thing. For a lab in college, we used operational amplifiers to modify the voltage output of strain gages to display the acutal load in Newtons placed on the experimental setup. Going to have to dig up the old lab books! Anyone tried this with op-amps before?

Actually, I use strain gauges at work from time to time.

However, I am no electronics engineer, I am just a technician :nonono:

Would the signal conditioner be able to convert non linear output from the sensor to linear input to the gauge/digital meter? Or would a digital readout even need linear input?

How much would an appropriate signal conditioner cost?

I'm not even sure I understand what I just wrote? :shrug:

jason
 
Well, it can be done....not simple or easy....I can do it but won't waste the time. I use Tweecer RT and it allows datalogging of 16 parameters simutaneously and ACT is one of them. It also allows tuning for best performance, but 10,000 or more functions, scalars and tables can be a bitch to learn how to tune successfully.

Good Luck, Don
 
gt90stang said:
Well, it can be done....not simple or easy....I can do it but won't waste the time. I use Tweecer RT and it allows datalogging of 16 parameters simutaneously and ACT is one of them. It also allows tuning for best performance, but 10,000 or more functions, scalars and tables can be a bitch to learn how to tune successfully.

Good Luck, Don

^What he said.
I just started with the RT myself. Information overload