So, when I was back in Maryland helping the guy I bought my truck from do all the maintenance on it before driving home, one of the first things he had me do was install a new oil pressure sensor. He said the oil pressure gauge was periodically acting weird, and would drop to 0 PSI. That obviously wasn't actually happening since it's a HEUI motor and they won't run if there is no oil pressure and the truck was running as normal.
Once the new sensor was installed the gauge was rock solid. On a cold start pressure would be above 80 at idle and then drop to around 25-30 when warm, and would run at 45-50 at cruising speed on the freeway. I wasn't watching the oil pressure gauge constantly on the way home, but I was frequently checking all of the gauges and never saw anything weird going on with the oil pressure.
Yesterday on my way back up the hill after dropping off my windshield defrost diffuser to be sandblasted and powder coated, I noticed the oil pressure was only at 20 PSI when it should have been above 40. When I stopped at the stop sign at the top of the hill and the engine was at idle, it was showing 0 PSI on the gauge. Drove the remaining 1/2 mile home, shut it down, checked the oil level, then started it back up and it was again idling at 25-30 and would rise to it's normal 45-50 as the RPM was in increased. Pretty sure I actually have oil pressure when the gauge drops to 0 or the motor would die, but still want to make sure there isn't some oil pump weirdness happening. Thinking about putting a tee fitting in under the oil pressure sensor and adding one of
these so I always have an easy mechanical double check on actual pressure. Don't like adding anything that could be a failure point or cause of a leak, but the piece of mind may be worth it.
Cure as to what you all think about the likelihood that the gauge may be going bad, or if it's more likely a ground issue or something? I haven't checked wiring at the gauge yet, but everything seems fine at the pressure sensor end. Of course it could also be anywhere along the way between the two as well. Guess it's time to pull the steering wheel and get behind the dash and start checking wiring to the gauge and the grounds.