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RE: Question from a new owner

To: "'Richard B Gosling'" <Gosling_Richard_B@perkins.com>,
Subject: RE: Question from a new owner
From: "Kaufman, Bob" <bkaufman@laquinta.com>
Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2000 06:01:34 -0500
Richard 

This high temp reading the other day was very weird.  No problem today.  I
did have to adjust my timing since it wasn't even close.  All other areas
you mentioned checked out except, I didn't check the stabilizer.  Could it
be a coincidence that after spraying water in the engine compartment, that I
get a high reading on the temp gauge?  

Another question for you:  Has anyone installed a oil pressure gauge and/or
a voltage gauge in their Spit?  If so, where did you put them?  I was
thinking about installing them where the radio is now.  Any thoughts?

Bob
76 Spitfire, Fla.

-----Original Message-----
From: Richard B Gosling [mailto:Gosling_Richard_B@perkins.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2000 6:08 AM
To: bkaufman; spitfires
Subject: Re: Question from a new owner


Bob,

There are a number of things that could cause a high temperature reading -
 check each until you have a solution:

Dodgy voltage stabiliser - this is a little box, that should be hanging off
the
 back of your speedometer.  Its job is to take the rather variable 11-14
volts
 from the battery, and give a stable 10V for the guages to work off.  If it
has
 decided to die (as they sometimes do for no good reason), it will give the
 full 11-14V from the battery.  Test is simple - does your fuel gauge still
 read correctly?  If this too is high, it is your stabiliser, and it needs
 replacing.

Temp gauge sensor - could just have got wet, in which case it will be fine
once
 dry.  The water will provide an alternative source to ground for the
 electrical current - the gauge works by sensing the resistance to ground of
 the sensor, which is grounded in its housing, and its resistance varies
with
 water temp.  It could be totally mis-functional, but in that case I would
 expect you to get no reading at all.

That's it for the dodgy reading section.  Now for the genuine overheating
 section -

Is there enough coolant?  You've checked this, the answer is yes, so it's
not
 that.

Is it a hot day?  This will be enough to cause a Spit to overheat,
particularly
 in stop-start traffic, or if driving hard.

Is your fan belt tight enough?  If it is even slightly loose, it will turn
the
 pump a bit, so some coolant will circulate, but not enough.

Is your thermostat operating correctly?  Take it out, and stick it in a pan
of
 water, with a thermometer.  Slowly heat the water, and check at what
 temperature the thermostat opens.  I think it should be about 180-190, but
my
 memory could be wrong, so someone out there please correct me.

There are no doubt other problems people can add, but I think these are the
 most likely.

Getting the ignition system wet is unlikely to cause over-heating - if it
does
 anything at all, it will prevent the engine running completely.

It could be your timing - early timing will increase engine temperature.
Worth
 checking, but if the problem came on suddenly this is a less likely cause,
as
 timing is more likely to go off gradually over time.

Hope this all helps,

Richard & Daffy

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