That all looks very nice, great job and engine installation.
I have restored old radios, I used to fix TVs and radios when I was in high school. I know how to read resistors. Their colors do not change unless they have literally burned out. That is a gray. This is a list of 10% resistor values, and each value is the root of decadal multiples:Dan, I must respectfully disagree with you on the resistor value. 6PC is holding the resistor backwards in the picture. The bands start at the edge of a resistor, not the middle. This makes it a 520 ohm resistor +- 10% (468 - 572).
Unless every probe in the new system is a two-wire affair, not relying on engine grounding for one side of the circuit, the new stuff will have the same sort of errors as you have now.So I'm going to buy a primary engine monitor at Oshkosh and let a professional wire it.
I am still nowhere.
Replaced the gauge and the probe.
Replaced the wire running from the probe to the gauge.
Ran the plane until it was pegged today. Shot the IR thermometer at the probe, oil filter, etc nothing above 190
FIFYSo I'm going to buy an engine at Oshkosh and let a professional wire it.
The resistor wasn't even part of the gauge in question. Totally irrelevant. But hopefully the rest of what you said will become true.Resistor color is moot - he is getting a new gauge, a new matching probe, and having it professionally installed by an avionics shop who will make sure ground is good.
Double moot. In that case how did the resister conversation enter the room? We are really good at tangents here!
Just saw this Brian, so sorry.
I had this EXACT problem with my old Tiger and oil temp gauge would read in red zone 19 minutes after starting flight. Story was my on field mechanic replaced the probe with a Tiger original. The GAUGE was not the original as the previous owner put a TON of upgrade into the panel.
After weeks of tracking things and on field mechanics giving up, I flew it to the main Class C and did the infrared temperature check like yours with a mechanic there. He figured it out in about 10 minutes .... bought the probe that matches the gauge manufacture and all corrected. I was down 2 months and the original mechanics could never figure it out.
Edit: went through all, vernatherm, oil cooler flush, etc.
Yes. And it's not certified for aircraft, so the price differential means nothing. It doesn't meet TSO standards.
This is the wiring diagram for that instrument. It doesn't use engine ground as a return path, so would eliminate any ground current leakage into the probe as a cause of overreading.A new Aerospace Log oil temp & pressure kit $1180 + Labor.
Aerospace Logic - Oil Pressure & Temperature Gauge Kit 2-1/4 | Aircraft Spruce
Aerospace Logic - Oil Pressure & Temperature Gauge Kit 2-1/4 The OPT200 is an advanced, next generation oil pressure and temperature combinational instrument.www.aircraftspruce.com
Certification means quality design, quality components, extensive testing, and much paperwork. None of it is free, and the small market for it means that the costs are spread among few buyers.I realize that
I'm glad to hear that. I was kind of getting pressured into Garmin so I went and talked to them and they said first you need to go over to Midwest panels because you're going to need to get a quick kit. So I went over to Midwest panels and started talking to them and their prices were double for the same level of monitoring.That's what I put in my Lance and it worked well.
I agree, those OLC connectors are the worst. I haven't installed an EI monitor in a bit, but I recall seeing a post by @Dave Arata on a forum somewhere (possibly this one) that they are changing things a bit and using crimp ferrules on the wires now (in combination with the OLC connectors) to improve things. I haven't seen how that works in practice yet.I did the install on the EI myself as well. My only complaint about it is the stupid connectors they use for the probes are the worst design for anything ever. I lost a probe every flight for the first 10 flights until I fixed every one a couple times. It's a goldilocks connector. If it's too loose it jiggles out. If it's too tight it breaks the thin brittle wires. Gotta be "just right".
Yeah, now I'll know that it's actually overheatingYou’re gonna enjoy that. Once you get it dialed in, you’ll no longer have to guess what your engine is doing.
Yeah, now I'll know IF it's actually overheating
in the 12?
@eman1200 needs to pay better attention to detail with his photoshopping skills.View attachment 131689
Yeah. What's with that? Oil temp usually redlines at 245°F, but the blue needle here is past redline with the temp at only 190°F.
View attachment 131689
Yeah. What's with that? Oil temp usually redlines at 245°F, but the blue needle here is past redline with the temp at only 190°F.
I did the install on the EI myself as well. My only complaint about it is the stupid connectors they use for the probes are the worst design for anything ever. I lost a probe every flight for the first 10 flights until I fixed every one a couple times. It's a goldilocks connector. If it's too loose it jiggles out. If it's too tight it breaks the thin brittle wires. Gotta be "just right".
What I ended up doing and haven't had any issues since year one is I staggered the connectors and wrapped the connection in high temp electrical tape. Then wrapped them into a bundle with more tape and zip tied them so they don't flutter due to the air movement in the cowl. I've had them in since 17 or 18.I agree, those OLC connectors are the worst. I haven't installed an EI monitor in a bit, but I recall seeing a post by @Dave Arata on a forum somewhere (possibly this one) that they are changing things a bit and using crimp ferrules on the wires now (in combination with the OLC connectors) to improve things. I haven't seen how that works in practice yet.
I did the install on the EI myself as well. My only complaint about it is the stupid connectors they use for the probes are the worst design for anything ever. I lost a probe every flight for the first 10 flights until I fixed every one a couple times. It's a goldilocks connector. If it's too loose it jiggles out. If it's too tight it breaks the thin brittle wires. Gotta be "just right".
you have to fill out a form with limits of each parameter and they program it to that worksheet. This is just some stock photo… also the numbers change to the colors of the bands each arrow is pointing to. Oil temp numbers in that pic should be red based on the arrow being in the red.View attachment 131689
Yeah. What's with that? Oil temp usually redlines at 245°F, but the blue needle here is past redline with the temp at only 190°F.
What I ended up doing and haven't had any issues since year one is I staggered the connectors and wrapped the connection in high temp electrical tape. Then wrapped them into a bundle with more tape and zip tied them so they don't flutter due to the air movement in the cowl. I've had them in since 17 or 18.
I didn't even know those Ferrules existed! I need to try one of those kits.I installed myself as well and really like the instrument and ease of installation. I removed all of my old analog gauges in the process. Accurate fuel level metering and fuel calculation add immeasurably to safety.
But I had the same connection failures on a couple of probes. One EGT probe was giving me a particularly bad time, only lasting a few hours after each of my numerous attempts to address it. I even had staggered the connectors as you mention, and tried adhesive heat shrink on the individual wires as well as around the bundle, but I still suffered failures. After contacting EI for a solution, they sent me a kit with ferrules and a crimp tool to try (mentioned in another thread), and I haven’t had a failure since.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk