• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

Voltmeter is not working (at all - never moves)

MuddWeiser

New member
106
2
0
Location
Truckee/CA
I FIXED MY ALTERNATOR ISSUES --- My passenger side was dead...

Anyway I got everything pretty much tied up on the charging system, both Gen lights now stay off after engine started.

My problem now is that the Voltmeter doesn't register any voltage???

Any ideas where to start?

I have heard that there is a resistor that goes bad on the backs of the meter and there is also some posts of a "relay" that goes bad?


I guess I want to know how I can check if either of these are my problem?

Thank you!
 

acetomatoco

New member
2,198
7
0
Take out the dash and see if it is hooked up. While you are in there, put your volt tester to the wire and ground and see if your gauge is defective. I believe there is a fuse in there for the VM, too. Electrical troubleshooting in TM 9-2320-289-20 and 34 will show you where.
 

Jersey4x4

New member
298
1
0
Location
Absecon, NJ
there is a 30amp relay located behind the STE/ICE plug that controles the gauge. take a metal object wire, long screwdriver, etc and touch one of the rivits next to the gauge to the gear shifter and see if the gauge works then.
 

CARNAC

The Envelope Please.
Supporting Vendor
8,281
649
113
Location
Corpus Christi, TX
I just replaced mine a few weeks ago. It's almost as easy just to replace it. Took me only a few minutes to do. Keep in mind I went to the school for the mechanically declined so if you know what you're doing, you can probably do it in one minute.
 

aboonski

Member
722
8
18
Location
West Melbourne Florida
Here is how to fix a broken volt meter in a CUCV

This works! I just bought a spare meter for my M1008A1 from and Ebay seller for $5.00 and spent $0.50 cents on a 300 ohm ceramic resistor at a local electronics store to facilitate repairs. It is very rare to find a voltmeter in a CUCV that is fried - generally just the resistor on the back has an open circuit making the meter non-functional. I used solderless connectors and some slip-on insulative material to do what you see in the photo. The meter works fine now.
 

Attachments

kentuckycucv

Member
361
9
12
Location
Louisville Ky
I just went to Radio Shack. I showed the guy the picture of ^ that green resistor and they didn't have one that big. They had no 300 Ohm resistors. What they did have was a 5 pack or 150 Ohm 1/2 watt resistors for 99 cents. :idea: Well I figured I could waste 99cents on an experiment. I twisted 2, 150ohm resistors in line and hooked them up.... Guess what happened????
It worked! I :p now have a working volt meter.
 

Somemedic

Member
531
0
16
Location
Hobart, IN
there is a 30amp relay located behind the STE/ICE plug that controles the gauge. take a metal object wire, long screwdriver, etc and touch one of the rivits next to the gauge to the gear shifter and see if the gauge works then.

If the gauge then works, its the relay?
 

bryab123

Member
77
0
6
Location
Bristol, TN
this fixed my problem but is there any specific wattage to use? i used 2 10watt 150ohm resistors they had several different wattages availiable.
 

bht50

New member
28
1
0
Location
Bloomington, Il.
Im with swyne mine dosent work when I first start it but if I tap it a few times on the face of the gauge it works fine.... till I shut the truck off then it falls back to the side of the gauge and needs a tap again to get it working always been like that since I got it.
 

Keith_J

Well-known member
3,657
1,319
113
Location
Schertz TX
this fixed my problem but is there any specific wattage to use? i used 2 10watt 150ohm resistors they had several different wattages availiable.
Overkill. This circuit is 24 volt, call it 30 volts at maximum when alternators both malfunction to full rotor current. Voltage equals current multiplied by resistance, or 30 = I x 300, therefore current equals 1/10 ampere. Power is equal to current squared multiplied by resistance, in this case that is 3 watts. Power is also voltage multiplied by current, also 3 watts. This is for the case where the voltmeter shorts out, in reality the resistance of the voltmeter is significant, there is less than one watt of power possible. Because voltmeter windings rarely short out.
 

Keith_J

Well-known member
3,657
1,319
113
Location
Schertz TX
Im with swyne mine dosent work when I first start it but if I tap it a few times on the face of the gauge it works fine.... till I shut the truck off then it falls back to the side of the gauge and needs a tap again to get it working always been like that since I got it.
Seen this issue too, the needle is rubbing on the gauge face, hanging up. I repaired mine but at considerable work to open the gauge, bend the needle, then check calibration and finally, crimp the bezel ring back.
 

MarcusOReallyus

Well-known member
4,524
816
113
Location
Virginia
Nothing like a zombie thread to lighten up the day! :mrgreen:

Methinks Keith was bored and cruising threads!


But since it's been mentioned, for the benefit of the electrically challenged:

Overkill. This circuit is 24 volt, call it 30 volts .....
All true, of course, but not a problem. When it comes to sizing resisters for something like this, overkill won't hurt anything, unless you get something so honkin' big it won't fit back there! :D

Having too-small resisters WILL cause problems. So, on resisters, when in doubt, go big.
 

howardc

Member
112
2
18
Location
KY
Wired two 150 resistors in line, now my voltmeter works for the first time in 3 yrs. On to the next issue...
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks