- 10,350
- 75
- 48
- Location
- Meadows of Dan, Virginia
There are numerous articles in the PS magazines over the years about the grounding of the oil pressure gauge, in particular (example shown in image #1).
The Faria instruments were designed to simplify production, one coil vs two and a plastic body, molded for the components. However, there is one little detail about how the connections are made from outside to inside that reduces reliability and that is a non-gas tight connection that was gas tight on earlier instruments. The contact interface on the Faria is smooth as compared to the fluted finish on the AC, for example. The fluted pin cuts into the contact and provides a "gas tight" connection, like a crimp connection. The Faria connection will corrode over time.
As shown in image #3 Faria attempted to solve the problem by adding a "bridge" between the external connections, which helps the odds, but doesn't solve the problem.
I just replaced a Faria oil pressure gauge, which was erratic with an older AC model, which now works perfectly.
Just a heads up, friends.
The Faria instruments were designed to simplify production, one coil vs two and a plastic body, molded for the components. However, there is one little detail about how the connections are made from outside to inside that reduces reliability and that is a non-gas tight connection that was gas tight on earlier instruments. The contact interface on the Faria is smooth as compared to the fluted finish on the AC, for example. The fluted pin cuts into the contact and provides a "gas tight" connection, like a crimp connection. The Faria connection will corrode over time.
As shown in image #3 Faria attempted to solve the problem by adding a "bridge" between the external connections, which helps the odds, but doesn't solve the problem.
I just replaced a Faria oil pressure gauge, which was erratic with an older AC model, which now works perfectly.
Just a heads up, friends.
Attachments
-
101.4 KB Views: 76
-
32.8 KB Views: 76
-
55.5 KB Views: 73