Skinny
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This subject has been beaten to death but here we are once again...everyone says that it works and that the alternator has a tach lead or the STE/ICE has a port for a tach signal but no one ACTUALLY has a thread about the installation and successful operation of the M998 tach on a CUCV.
I have the M998 tach which has power/ground (24v) for the actual gauge. It also has two ports labeled positive and negative for the signal coming in. Using a signal generator, I fed it a 2v AC sine wave and it responded with a tach indication and the hobbs meter starting rotating. Going off of memory, it was completely linear and that feeding it 50 Hz it would indicate 3,000 rpms. If my calculations are correct, 50 revolutions per second is equal to 50 Hz. That also means that 1 revolution per second is 1 Hz.
Since a magnetic pickup would produce an AC sine wave, wouldn't this tach work with just simply mounting a single magnet to the harmonic balancer with a pickup? 1 revolution would create one sine wave which if I am calculating correctly is exactly what the M998 tach is looking for. Granted the pickup size, magnet size, and gap would have to be tuned because the tach really likes atleast 1v AC otherwise it starts to drop off and wiggle.
For you electrical engineers...thoughts???
I have the M998 tach which has power/ground (24v) for the actual gauge. It also has two ports labeled positive and negative for the signal coming in. Using a signal generator, I fed it a 2v AC sine wave and it responded with a tach indication and the hobbs meter starting rotating. Going off of memory, it was completely linear and that feeding it 50 Hz it would indicate 3,000 rpms. If my calculations are correct, 50 revolutions per second is equal to 50 Hz. That also means that 1 revolution per second is 1 Hz.
Since a magnetic pickup would produce an AC sine wave, wouldn't this tach work with just simply mounting a single magnet to the harmonic balancer with a pickup? 1 revolution would create one sine wave which if I am calculating correctly is exactly what the M998 tach is looking for. Granted the pickup size, magnet size, and gap would have to be tuned because the tach really likes atleast 1v AC otherwise it starts to drop off and wiggle.
For you electrical engineers...thoughts???