Temp gauge reads cold - 1994 Accord

Discussion in 'Accord' started by acellier, Aug 12, 2005.

  1. acellier

    acellier Guest

    1994 Accord EX
    Car starts and runs OK, but mileage is a bit low. I think the O2 senso
    may be shot - barely passed smog last couple times. But new issue:
    My temp gauge rarely rises above the bottom peg.
    Checked the TW sensor with an ohmeter and IR gun. The resistanc
    appears very close to the published curve for Standard TS172:
    degF/ohms: 66/6700, 93/2000, 120/1000, 180/420.
    Temp gauge is not off the bottom peg at 180 degF; if driven awhile i
    can get hotter and gauge makes a slight movement.
    Test: Shorting the sensor wire to ground pegs the meter (300 mA)
    Substituting a 67 ohm resistor, the gauge reads about 1/3 scale (belo
    the center mark; 112 mA). With a 150 ohm resistor (60 mA) the mete
    barely moves.
    Seems as if the meter, or the metering circuit, may be faulty rathe
    than the temp sensor.
    Anyone have experience with this type of failure? Could bad tem
    circuit affect smog?
    ... acellie
     
    acellier, Aug 12, 2005
    #1
  2. My temp gauge rarely rises above the bottom peg. Checked the TW sensor
    with an ohmeter and IR gun. The resistance appears very close to the
    published curve for Standard TS172: degF/ohms: 66/6700, 93/2000, 120/1000,
    180/420. Temp gauge is not off the bottom peg at 180 degF; if driven awhile
    it can get hotter and gauge makes a slight movement. Test: Shorting the
    sensor wire to ground pegs the meter (300 mA). Substituting a 67 ohm
    resistor, the gauge reads about 1/3 scale (below
    moves. Seems as if the meter, or the metering circuit, may be faulty rather
    than the temp sensor. Anyone have experience with this type of failure?
    Could bad temp circuit affect smog?<<

    Sounds like your thermostat is stuck open, thus not permitting the engine to
    warm up.
     
    Sid Schweiger, Aug 13, 2005
    #2
  3. acellier

    jim beam Guest

    the gauge is very non-linear - stops people worrying about minute
    variations.
    bad thermostats affect smog. big time. sounds like yours is stuck
    open. replace with oem, & don't forget the rubber gasket - they tend to
    deteriorate too.
     
    jim beam, Aug 13, 2005
    #3
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