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My oil pressure sender has a broken wire, possibly a ground!
Anyone know where it goes as there are 2 plugs?
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if you can reach in and unplug one of the plugs and take a look at it if you can't see it close enough grab your cell phone a name at the plug with the flash take a picture of it you might be able to see II broken Spade on the connector. Or you can remove the connector take a picture. I think some how some ones hand may have yanked the wire out some how.
Yeah today is car engines are a real pain in the butt to work on and trust me I've broken wires and vacuum lines. I just wish there was a car engine that wouldn't be so hard on the body you know we had to bend over most of the day. Thank God lectric vehicles are coming out and you won't have to deal with all the mechanical nightmares dealing with Automotive Engines & TransmissionsI just did the valve cover gasket and was stood/sat over that part so it's very likely I've pulled it with my boots! I'll whip it off for some better pics
Let me tell you a story that well made me angry. My brother can be in a real ass. He let me borrow his Toyota car which was an older vehicle I can't remember if it was a Corolla or a Tercel or something like that. Anyway I was driving it into the next town and the oil pressure light started to fluctuate and I said crap LOL so I went to the convenience store and bought some oil and topped it off and it still would Flex you're off and on. I decided to drive at 17 Mile back to the house and the light came on. So I told my brother he ain't got all pissed off you blame me and he want me to replace the engine and I said no way this is occurring before I even was driving it for occurred while I was driving it. Anyway I put my oil pressure sender to the output of the cylinder head and I got zero pressure on my old pressure gauge. I'm taking myself holy crap I'm biting nails because the last camshaft and the last crankshaft could be possibly damage from a lack of oil pressure. So I took the valve cover off and took the cam shaft off or something I can't remember what to verify if there was no damage and there was no damage. And then I took the last connecting rod piston cap and there was no damage. And then I took off the timing belt and the oil pump pulley spun around the pulley bolt which means that the pump was out pumping oil pressure as I was driving down the highway. And I'm thinking of myself was God looking out for me and somehow miraculously prevented connecting rod and Main Journal Rod damage while I was driving down the highway to my brother's house? It's impossible to have some kind of damage I without oil pressure. Anyway I replaced the oil pump and timing belt and put it all back together. And the oil pressure came back to normal. I believe that there should be I mechanical oil pressure gauge in every vehicle. There should also be fan RPM sensor for every oil pressure pump. If the oil pressure fails there should be a backup oil pump just like in aircraft.Yeah today is car engines are a real pain in the butt to work on and trust me I've broken wires and vacuum lines. I just wish there was a car engine that wouldn't be so hard on the body you know we had to bend over most of the day. Thank God lectric vehicles are coming out and you won't have to deal with all the mechanical nightmares dealing with Automotive Engines & Transmissions
The oil pressure sender is directly under the exhaust manifold and behind the A/C compressor,Hi there, I'm having a similar issue with my 80 series. What is the black box that the wires route to, but doesn't plug into anything? What is its purpose? I'm pretty stumped on why I can't get the gauge to move.
Yep, that is where I'm looking. I tested each wire and connection and they have continuity. But They go into this box (see image) which does not. I'm wondering what it is and the purpose if it? Maybe I can bypass it?
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You're welcomeHmm that sounds like it's similar to my issue. I'll make some adjustments and report back. Thanks much!
Hey, apologies... just for some clarification. Did you remove that terminal box then? Also, do you know what the purpose of that box is?You're welcome
Hey, apologies... just for some clarification. Did you remove that terminal box then? Also, do you know what the purpose of that box is?
No I left the terminal box as I had another wire which was in the loom, have a look at the plug end where the wires come from and I think the wire that goes to the little black connector is a cream colored wire, chase that back through the loom and if it goes to the terminal box try and test it at that point
The FSM has a test procedure to determine if it’s the gauge or sending unit that’s causing the fault. In some cases if the gauge is shorted too long it can bend the internals of the gauge to where it doesn’t read anymore but in some cases that can be fixed. Here’s a link to my thread (shameless plug). I detail a little about the FSM procedure and then how to repair it if it’s bent inside. Good luck!Hi there, I'm having a similar issue with my 80 series. What is the black box that the wires route to, but doesn't plug into anything? What is its purpose? I'm pretty stumped on why I can't get the gauge to move.