Donut Limo
Member
if your scanner shows 198-207f ECT thats perfect.
the sending unit is a separate circuit. im thinking the gauge is damaged or the wire is shorting on something. when that wire grounds itself, the gauge will peg so any kind of rubbing or chaffing with that wire exposed will make the needle jump up.
you can measure the resistance from the sending unit to ground and again from the wire at the gauge to ground and might be able to find the problem or at least isolate it to the gauge. did that make sense?
the sending unit is a separate circuit. im thinking the gauge is damaged or the wire is shorting on something. when that wire grounds itself, the gauge will peg so any kind of rubbing or chaffing with that wire exposed will make the needle jump up.
you can measure the resistance from the sending unit to ground and again from the wire at the gauge to ground and might be able to find the problem or at least isolate it to the gauge. did that make sense?