My EGT gauge has started to read nothing every once in awhile
trbankii
10-15-2010, 18:08
I'd check connections and grounds.
Alternatively, it is possible that the sensor is failing. What is its age?
DmaxMaverick
10-16-2010, 01:11
It may depend on the type of gage you have. If you have a millivolt gage (thermocouple wire connects directly to the gage), it's probably the thermocouple or a poor connection (the gages rarely fail). If you have a gage requiring an amplifier, it could be the thermocouple, wiring, amplifier, or interference.
On mine (Isspro amplifier mounted in overhead console), any radio transmission (Motorola 2-way) will cause the gage to "zero". Other interference will do the same, if the conditions are right. If I hold my cell phone near it, the gage will zero. If you have a cell phone, radio transmitter or other RF generating device (or antenna) near the amplifier, it may do the same.
When selecting a thermocouple, always choose one well above your expected range of use. If you have a 1,500° gage, and use a 1,500° thermocouple, the thermocouple won't be as durable as a 2,000°. They cost a little more in the short haul, but you will have to replace it sooner (typically about 1/2 the time, depending on how much use is near the max). Most post-turbo applications are fine with a 1,500° thermocouple, while pre-turbo should use a 2,000° for similar life expectancy. For reference, long-term sustained use should be less than 50% of the thermocouple's range with only occasional use above 50% for longer life expectancy. In any case, thermocouples do fail at some point, with the life depending on the amount of time used nearer the range max.
mid to late 90s when a new 6.5l was put in the suburban
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