KettleCarver
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Does anyone know the thread size and type on the thermostat housing where the temp sensor goes?
Thanks,
Marty
Thanks,
Marty
Robert, I think stock on the Tiger was the special T piece for the heater hoses iirc.Stock is in the manifold and usually 3/8 NPT (5/8-18 tapered) in the US manifold, and the sensor is 5/8-18 as well, but a straight thread. I use a Dowty seal as the Smiths NPT sensors are NLA
Or heli-coil the manifold to a straight thread and use the same Dowty seal
That is not to say that the sensor is calibrated to your gauge.....................
I believe that the Mk II Tigers had a "T" also, but it was not threaded for the temp sensor. On my F4B, I do not have nor need the "T" and my sensor is screwed into the top of the intake manifold.Robert, I think stock on the Tiger was the special T piece for the heater hoses iirc.
When the voltage stabilizer isn't working correctly, the fuel gauge is also affected and will read high as well. the T fitting on the engine pictured must have a ground wire attached in order for the sender to be able to "communicate" with the gauge.MKI use 1224826 - Housing - Temperature Transmitter between the Carb spacer and the elbow fitting on the intake manifold
View attachment 19812
Stock Tiger thermostat housings do not have a boss for the temp sender.
Mk II the temp sender was in the intake manifold
If your temp gage is reading wrong, the voltage stabilizer may need attention.
Ron Fraser
Just to clarify then, that "T" fitting is a separate piece and not part of the intake manifold?MKI use 1224826 - Housing - Temperature Transmitter between the Carb spacer and the elbow fitting on the intake manifold
View attachment 19812
Stock Tiger thermostat housings do not have a boss for the temp sender.
Mk II the temp sender was in the intake manifold
If your temp gage is reading wrong, the voltage stabilizer may need attention.
Ron Fraser
I checked the voltage stabilizer and improved the ground. My fuel gauge is not pinned and appears to be reading accurately. So I believe the stabilizer is ok.When the voltage stabilizer isn't working correctly, the fuel gauge is also affected and will read high as well. the T fitting on the engine pictured must have a ground wire attached in order for the sender to be able to "communicate" with the gauge.
Below is the location of the sender installed in an F4B intake, in this instance on my MK2 engine. You can just make it out between the distributor cap and the connector for the heater hose.
View attachment 19813
Just to clarify then, that "T" fitting is a separate piece and not part of the intake manifold?
The ground wouldn't be needed as the sender is self- grounded to the thermostat housing... the engine is grounded through the ground strap on the left side of the bellhousing to the disused (Alpine) transmission crossmember point.I checked the voltage stabilizer and improved the ground. My fuel gauge is not pinned and appears to be reading accurately. So I believe the stabilizer is ok.
Here is a picture of my set up. The only place I could reach with the ground wire (without cutting and splicing my new wire loom) was the screw on the distributor cap. The distributor has an aluminum housing. The temp gauge does change its reading as the car warms up, so the sender is getting a reading, just not an accurate one. Is it possible that the ground is not good enough and it is preventing the sender from reading accurately?
View attachment 19833
I got a brand new sender from Sunbeam Specialties, I would hope they knew the right one to send me. That is not to say that a brand new part could not be defective.It's possible it is the wrong sender. Mine was wrong when I removed it from my Tiger.
This is an excellent reference.
http://mhartman.net/files/sunbeam/fuel & temp gauges.pdf
That kit looks awesome! I am going to have to get one of those.There is a post which discusses the adjustment of the temperature gauge using a corvette part. I think this is the link
https://www.catmbr.org/cat-forum/threads/adjust-the-temperature-gauge.6957/
CorrectJust to clarify then, that "T" fitting is a separate piece and not part of the intake manifold?