Oil Pressure Sender - then whats this?

smokey

New Member
Jan 15, 2006
129
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0
Melbourne Australia
with my limited understanding i was under the impression the oil pressure sender was located just infront of the oil filter

now when i went to plug in the connector i found this thing

1zxmw6a.jpg


could someone perhaps enlighten me? :1zhelp:
 

smokey

New Member
Jan 15, 2006
129
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0
Melbourne Australia
nah i've got a larger unit down there

i was confused because in pictures i've seen its just a little plug, not a big brass thing
 
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miggles

i wasnt speeding officer
Jun 3, 2005
526
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perth West Australia
Havnt you got a autometer oilpress gauge? If so then you need to hook your gauge up to that rather than the ecu one (that goes to your dash)
 

bigal0043

New Member
Jun 29, 2005
813
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Plattsburgh,NY
www.mk3supra.net
that is the oil pressure unit... the plug that goes into that should have a big boot on it... when mine fell off it took me a little bit to figure out how it plugged in but after realizing that the end of the plug slides onto the end... on the very end is a little ball the plug slides on there... its kinda hard to explain in words... but it dosent slide on like a normal plug but on the side
 

Insidious Surmiser

Formerly 89jdm7m
May 12, 2006
2,172
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Oceanfront
smokey said:
nah i've got a larger unit down there

i was confused because in pictures i've seen its just a little plug, not a big brass thing
the plug is the jdm unit (won't work w/ usdm gauges), the cylinder is the usdm unit

edit: maybee he's talking about the rubber cover?
 

89mkthree

supies ignore irish luck!
Apr 12, 2005
138
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38
near chi town
if you install an autometer gauge do you just replace the stock sender with the autometer one? is that ok with our ECU?
 

SupraDerk

The Backseat Flyer
Sep 17, 2005
546
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40
Tallahassee
I wouldn't think the ECU would be mad about it. Looking at the wiring diagram the signal comes FROM the ECU to the sender (which has variable resistance) which looks like it my be connected in parallel with the gauge. So as the resistance changes (probably due to the change in pressure of the oil) the amount of current flowing to the guage changes and drives the needle. So if you take away the signal you effectively create an open circuit where the oil pressure gauge is and it's like it's not even there.

But anyway, my guess is that the ECU would just keep giving out a signal, but the source voltage wouldn't go anywhere. Kind of like standing outside and screaming, but no one hears you. Don't take this for fact, just what I think is going on.
 

lazarous

Walking Dead......
Jun 1, 2005
93
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Portland, Oregon
Having the sensor unhooked does nothing, When i would start my car the needle would shoot up, then go to zero and stay there no matter what. When i looked, the sender wasn't even hooked up. I hard wired mine, because the boot fell off
 

SupraDerk

The Backseat Flyer
Sep 17, 2005
546
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40
Tallahassee
Notice it says "to oil pressure switch"...meaning it would be an output. And the gauge DOES have resistance.

http://www.cygnusx1.net/supra/library/TSRM/be/BE_043.html


It would seem to use a pulse to drive it, but either way, if you take away the signal from the ECU you have an open circuit across the gauge. And nothing would seem to be hurt by not running the ECU to the gauge.


Edit: And the sender is variable, but it looks to be a rheostat. It controls the amount of current flow, which I would assume would go into a capacitor and create the pulse.
 
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Oct 11, 2005
3,816
16
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Thousand Oaks, CA
Read step 3 "inspect sender gauge operation". Note how you use a light bulb and count the number of pulses. The sender is a switch that is pulse modulated depending on oil pressure. It is an INPUT to the ECU.

I quote: "the number of flashes should vary with engine speed",
There is no resistance spec on the sender (the unit that is attached to the oil pressure port on the block). It "sends' a signal to the gauge and ECU. Hence the name!

The receiver "dashboard" gauge has a resistance spec. It is a bimetal spring with a heater coil around it. It receives' the signal from the sender. Get it?
 

SupraDerk

The Backseat Flyer
Sep 17, 2005
546
0
0
40
Tallahassee
If it's an input to the ECU then explain to me where the source voltage is coming from. Because the sender is grounded to the block and the gauge is relying on the ECU and sender. I agree the sender is an input to the gauge. But not the ECU.