SasquatchSanta
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Does anyone know the best "un-obstructed" place on an M35 (LDT465) oil pan to install a sending unit for a mechanical oil temperature gauge?
This may sound like a silly question but I'm going to install an oil temp sending unit on my Deuce without removing the pan and I don't know if there are any baffles or partitions in the pan. If there are any I want to avoid the area. My fear is that I will drill into the pan
and hit a baffel or "something".
If anyone has a pan they could take a look at and advise where a clear and un-obstructed location to locate a sending unit would be I would appreciate it. Better yet --- a picture is worth a thousand words.
I've removed the fan from my bobbed deuce and installed an electric fan that comes on at 195 degrees and off at 175. With the standard winter front my truck is heating to 180 degrees which means it's bumping up against the thermostat and the thermostat is controlling the temperature. When the weather gets down around zero I have to shut the flaps on the winter front.
In the summer, without the winter front, the temp gets and stays around 190 to 195 degrees. I've already installed a mechanical water temp gauge and I'm getting ready to install a mechanical oil temp gauge so I can keep track of oil temps in the summer.
I've recently installed a new, less restrictive electric radiator fan mount that hopefully will allow the engine to run a little cooler in the summer. I would feel a lot better if the thermostat was able to control the temp (@180 degrees) with the fan off.
Thanks
This may sound like a silly question but I'm going to install an oil temp sending unit on my Deuce without removing the pan and I don't know if there are any baffles or partitions in the pan. If there are any I want to avoid the area. My fear is that I will drill into the pan
and hit a baffel or "something".
If anyone has a pan they could take a look at and advise where a clear and un-obstructed location to locate a sending unit would be I would appreciate it. Better yet --- a picture is worth a thousand words.
I've removed the fan from my bobbed deuce and installed an electric fan that comes on at 195 degrees and off at 175. With the standard winter front my truck is heating to 180 degrees which means it's bumping up against the thermostat and the thermostat is controlling the temperature. When the weather gets down around zero I have to shut the flaps on the winter front.
In the summer, without the winter front, the temp gets and stays around 190 to 195 degrees. I've already installed a mechanical water temp gauge and I'm getting ready to install a mechanical oil temp gauge so I can keep track of oil temps in the summer.
I've recently installed a new, less restrictive electric radiator fan mount that hopefully will allow the engine to run a little cooler in the summer. I would feel a lot better if the thermostat was able to control the temp (@180 degrees) with the fan off.
Thanks