Pantera DeTomaso Temperature Gauges
Over the years I have heard that the temperature gauges in Pantera’s were a bit off. And, I’ve heard that adding a 10 ohm resister in series with the temperature probe would make the gauge more accurate. In fact, at least one vendor offers a nifty plug and play setup to do just this. Our car came with the 230F gauge – which shows 160F as the centered point on the scale. With a 190F thermostat – the car always looks like it is running warm. And, when the car is actually hot – as in I set the radiator fan controller to come on at around 210 and off at 220F, well, it looks like the thing is really too hot, with the needle way over to the right. I was also aware that later cars came with 260F gauges. So, I set out to find a 260 on eBay. Sure enough, one showed up and found a new home. Naturally, I was curious how accurate it was. And, well, for that matter, how accurate the original was. Early on I tested the 230F gauge to see if the Echlin TS6628 temperature sensor would work. I set up this apparatus to see what I could learn – an aluminum container filled with water that I could heat with a heat gun, temperature sensor and temperature gauge in the water, two volt-ohm meters to see what the sensor’s resistance was, and the temperature gauge left in the dash, with the engine wires extended to the temperature sensor in the aluminum can. Oh, I used a screw driver to stir the water in the can.
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Figure 2 – Resistance curve for Echlin TS6628
You can see on the plot that my data line up well with the specification data for the Echlin sensor. OK, one of the volt-ohm meters was useless, but the other did great.
The next figure shows the data points from the original 230F gauge superimposed on the above plot, without the sensor data points, leaving just the temperature sensor response curve.
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