pickelhead
New member
I'm looking to replace my stock analog gauges with an amp meter and a oil temp/pressure gauge. Where do I get the new gauges and where do I find the EASY instructions to do this.
I'm looking to replace my stock analog gauges with an amp meter and a oil temp/pressure gauge. Where do I get the new gauges and where do I find the EASY instructions to do this.
I think that I'd like to replace my fuel gauge with one that gives the current pricing for a barrel of crude oil coming out of the Middle East.
The temperatuture gauge needs to go, and one that tells me what my resale value is would replace it in a heatbeat! :roflblack::joke::roflblack:
If you want to install an amp meter make sure it has a remote shunt sensor.
This means that the gauge can be on the dash and you don't have to route a heavy gauge wire up to it.
VDO makes a line of gauges for boats (OceanLine) and these work well.
Also, a voltmeter should be wired through a fuse and a relay directly across the battery teminals, that's the voltage that is important.
If you take it from the gauge wires it is the regulated voltage you are seeing, not quite the same thing especially if your battery begins to fail you can tell better.
JMHO, not carved in stone.
:hun: There is no stock voltmeter.So the stock voltmeter is worthless??
:hun: There is no stock voltmeter.
There is a 12V wire there.
And the voltmeter connected to it will read 12.7 to 14.5 V roughly.
My point is that you get a better picture of what you are monitoring by placing the voltmeter directly across the battery terminals through a fuse and relay.
If you just want another gauge and really don't care then then do it the simple way.
I used to know what a relay does and why it was important. I would be eternally grate if someone could refresh my memory. :bowdown:
A relay is a device that has 2 or more sets of contacts in a (now) sealed container. One set of contacts is actuated by a signal, say 12 volts from the ignition circuit,through a coil that pulls another set of contacts in place that will conduct current to another device. This has applications in the voltmeter rig in the case that through a relay that is activated by the ignition, when the ignition is off, the relay deenergized and the voltmeter or whatever is hooked up no longer draws from the battery, thus preventing excessive drain. When the ignition is on, the secondary contacts make, and you can read volts right at the battery. Really the most accurate place to look.
Totally unrelated, but remember when the high beam switch in cars and trucks was on the floorboard? Your foot pressing on the switch latched a set of contacts tied to a much heavier wire to power the high beams. Picture your foot as the power source for the relay and that might help. Maybe I said too much already. But one more thing, relays can also be used, in the case of foglights, to use a smaller current to switch a larger current so you don't have to have large conductors running all over the place thus reducing cost and complexity.
Being quiet now, Patrick