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Oil pressure gauge playing games

RT SE 440

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Hello guys slowly sorting out all the little gremlins on the dash 1st problem i had a undecided fuel gauge which would work when it wanted anyway sorted that one out with a new solid state gauge cluster voltage regulator & i was hoping it would also sort my oil pressure gauge also but no such luck.Anyway the issue is you turn the ignition on and the gauge goes all the way to the full position then slowly back to zero now i have a new sender unit but not to say that isn't faulty but you would hope not. Has anyone had this happen on their car or any suggestions to what may be causing this
 
You state "goes all the way to the full position then slowly back to zero"... Does the oil gauge show anything after startup and running for a while ? Was old sender indication nothing or providing strange readings ?
With original mechanical gauge regulator, or.. if you have the modern RTE solid state regulator, the gauges for temp, fuel and oil pressure, should go near full travel and fall back on startup. Since the gauges are thermal devices, in that a resistance wire is wrapped onto a bi-metal strip that makes the gauge needles move, the gauge voltage regulator supplies the gauges with near full battery voltage for a few seconds at start and then drops to a pulsating (aprox.) 5 volts for normal gauge operation. This helps the gauges provide readings rapidly upon startup.
The sender units are basically variable resistors that are in series from one side of the 3 gauges, temp, fuel and oil pressure to chassis ground. In case of temp and oil senders, they screw into the block and that's how the sender gets it's ground, so using a teflon tape can make for a poor ground and in-accurate readings. With a given sender disconnected from cars wiring, you can measure the senders resistance with an ohm meter between senders terminal and chassis ground. Observe the resistance swing from cold condition when started to operating temperature after engine has been running for a while. It could be you have a defective or improper sender.
 
Also post a picture of your oil pressure sending unit. There is one for a gauge and one for a light. Need to verify you have the proper one.
 
You state "goes all the way to the full position then slowly back to zero"... Does the oil gauge show anything after startup and running for a while ? Was old sender indication nothing or providing strange readings ?
With original mechanical gauge regulator, or.. if you have the modern RTE solid state regulator, the gauges for temp, fuel and oil pressure, should go near full travel and fall back on startup. Since the gauges are thermal devices, in that a resistance wire is wrapped onto a bi-metal strip that makes the gauge needles move, the gauge voltage regulator supplies the gauges with near full battery voltage for a few seconds at start and then drops to a pulsating (aprox.) 5 volts for normal gauge operation. This helps the gauges provide readings rapidly upon startup.
The sender units are basically variable resistors that are in series from one side of the 3 gauges, temp, fuel and oil pressure to chassis ground. In case of temp and oil senders, they screw into the block and that's how the sender gets it's ground, so using a teflon tape can make for a poor ground and in-accurate readings. With a given sender disconnected from cars wiring, you can measure the senders resistance with an ohm meter between senders terminal and chassis ground. Observe the resistance swing from cold condition when started to operating temperature after engine has been running for a while. It could be you have a defective or improper sender.
I have a solid state electronic board and my gauges do not sweep when first turned on. They also work correctly. If the board was designed that way all 3 would sweep. I have never seen the older gauges do that. Only reason being that they are not the style like the newer cars use that sweep. The newer gauges use stepper motors that allow the rapid sweep.
 
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