Tris
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posted on 26/1/11 at 09:39 PM |
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Info on ETB Oil Pressure Sensor ?
Hi All,
I am in the process of wiring up my Race Technology Dash, and one little area has me stumped.
I brought a combined oil preassure sensor and switch from ETB (makers of the digidash) ages go before i decided to go for the race technology dash.
Anyway ive come to wire it up and i can't seem to find any info on voltage to preassure values (ive got the 90 PSI unit, which i think is not a
VDO item, but a ETB special - pic below)
Does anyone know if this sensor needs a pull down resistor ?, and the formula for pressure/voltage ?
Cheers
Tris
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Paradoxia0
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posted on 26/1/11 at 10:26 PM |
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I am afraid I don't but give ETB a call. I have a couple of times in the past and they are really helpful!
Mark
There is no replacement for displacement...
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lsdweb
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posted on 26/1/11 at 10:31 PM |
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Tris
I used their sensors with my Racetechnology dash and logger - I gave them a ring and they provided me with all the info!
Let me know if you're struggling and I can try and dig out the info.
I do remember having to wire in a resistor - I had some help on here with that!
Regards
Wyn
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lsdweb
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posted on 26/1/11 at 10:34 PM |
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Pll up resistor wiring - courtesy of MikeRJ
Link
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Tris
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posted on 26/1/11 at 11:01 PM |
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Hello both,
Yes, i gave ETB a call and while not exactly being un-helpfull, they were not overly helpful once they asked why i needed the info. I will ring them
again though in the next couple of days to see if i get more success
Its the calibration info i need (ie x pressure = y resistance) so i can input this info into my DASH2. Wyn - if you have this info then i would be
very grateful if you could dig it out for us.
Cheers
Tris
[Edited on 26/1/11 by Tris]
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lsdweb
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posted on 27/1/11 at 07:46 AM |
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I'll have a look although I'm not optimistic as all my setup stuff was on an old pc that's died. You could always try asking on the
race technology forum.
Another option is to calibrate it yourself - connect the sensor onto a length of hose, T off this to take a pressure gauge and then pressurise this
using an airline or foot pump (although you may struggle to reach the top end). Take resistance readings at every 10 psi , plot these on a piece of
graph paper or in excel and work out your equation, or I think the Racetechnology software can do it for you. And, if you do this with all your wiring
in place including your pull up resistor, you won't need to factor that into your equation. Sounds more difficult than it'll be!
Wyn
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