Jump to content

1951 Pontiac Chieftain


PhilA

Recommended Posts

Well, tested the ammeter. It's good. Was replaced in 1970 according to the writing on the back.

 

post-5454-0-02706200-1543029779_thumb.jpg

 

Hooked up with a bit of pressure from my tire pump, the oil pressure gauge works.

 

post-5454-0-79139900-1543029760_thumb.jpg

 

Unfortunately, both the fuel and temperature gauge have been hooked up to 12V. The temperature gauge was hazy on the glass. I was wondering why. Well, there's why. It caught fire.

 

Ugh. I hate dumbass people.

 

 

Phil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thinking on this front, it looks like the coils will undo.

 

That means I can recalculate the correct resistance to half the current by reducing the wire gauge.

 

Basically, rewind the gauge for 12V and forego the voltage converter.

 

Phil

 

I was about to say dont you have to worry about the inductance of it all but then I realised this is just a DC electromagnet moving a simple needle  :mrgreen:

 

it looks simple enough that even if the coil and core was completely toast and ya could not count the windings, that with a small tube/lump of ferrite and some magnet wire you could prolly make your own core n coil :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, it's two coils at 90 degrees to each other, one having the resistance across it varied to make the iron of the needle move.

 

Simple but effective.

 

The core is the iron bolt. It will have some sort of secondary center but from what I read both coils should be identical resistance, so that makes life a little easier.

 

I think I'll be rewinding these ones.

 

 

Phil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I started today on the temperature gauge.

 

post-5454-0-63882400-1543095657_thumb.jpg

 

Managed to get one coil out.

 

post-5454-0-02855700-1543095867_thumb.jpg

 

I built a contraption to count the number of turns the drill makes. Made a cammed section on the chuck out of tape, and fixed a microswitch to the metal plate, operated by the cam.

 

post-5454-0-05128800-1543096192_thumb.jpg

 

Many turns!

 

post-5454-0-94384700-1543096239_thumb.jpg

 

All unwound. All burned. So now at least I can solder the three pieces together, measure the resistance now all the windings aren't shorted out.

 

I need to go find my micrometer and see what gauge this wire is also.

 

Phil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I started today on the temperature gauge.

 

attachicon.gif20181124_133531.jpg

 

Managed to get one coil out.

 

attachicon.gif20181124_142308.jpg

 

I built a contraption to count the number of turns the drill makes. Made a cammed section on the chuck out of tape, and fixed a microswitch to the metal plate, operated by the cam.

 

attachicon.gif20181124_143200.jpg

 

Many turns!

 

attachicon.gif20181124_143205.jpg

 

All unwound. All burned. So now at least I can solder the three pieces together, measure the resistance now all the windings aren't shorted out.

 

I need to go find my micrometer and see what gauge this wire is also.

 

Phil

Quoted so I can like it again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok so

 

33 gauge is 206 ohms per 1000'

 

36 gauge is 416 ohms per 1000'

 

Therefore 518 turns of 36AWG should see these coils working again, but for 12V instead of 6V. Ordered some enameled wire, shall rewind it and test. Calibrating the things is gonna be fun though...

 

 

Phil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah but - same current @ double the voltage means coils will dissipate double the power.

 

Same current, double the turns means armatures will see double the magnetic field strength. Will this matter? Maybe only if something saturates, affecting linearity. Possibly.

 

Not being picky, just enjoying what you are posting!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok so

 

33 gauge is 206 ohms per 1000'

 

36 gauge is 416 ohms per 1000'

 

Therefore 518 turns of 36AWG should see these coils working again, but for 12V instead of 6V. Ordered some enameled wire, shall rewind it and test. Calibrating the things is gonna be fun though...

 

 

Phil

 

 

Yeah but - same current @ double the voltage means coils will dissipate double the power.

 

Same current, double the turns means armatures will see double the magnetic field strength. Will this matter? Maybe only if something saturates, affecting linearity. Possibly.

 

Not being picky, just enjoying what you are posting!

 

 

Same number of turns, twice the resistance, same current for double the voltage.

 

I'm reducing the wire gauge. Yes, they'll have to dissipate more. I'm going to test run them and check the temperature they operate at.

 

Phil

 

*brainmelt

Link to comment
Share on other sites

*brainmelt

 

 

 

and thats not even getting into things like power factor (or negative resistance)  :mrgreen:

 

for example a 40W 4ft T12 Fluorescent tube has a voltage drop of 110V and a rated current of 0.43A but if you do ohms law that comes out to 47W thats because the tube has a power factor of 0.85 so factor that into the maths and you get 110*0.43*0.85=40.2W :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have been corrected on my physics- double the resistance by halfing the wire cross-section, but also double the number of turns.

 

12V conversions often done to 166% rather than my planned 200% due to the wire not all fitting on the bobbin if you want to wind twice as many turns.

 

I shall experiment and see! Wire is expected to arrive tomorrow.

 

Phil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I understand cleaning interiors, I do not understand whatever you have been saying about electricals. Please stop. It hurts my head.

No, this is excellent, every day is a school day, and as our safety manager would always say, "there's no such thing as a problem, it's a learning opportunity".

 

The late Dave numbers would have been well impressed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

have this "crass" meme for when you start work on the Alternator/dynamo  :mrgreen:

 

post-25614-0-70253500-1543357764_thumb.png

 

(For those who dont know its Fleming's left/right hand rule Motors/generators)

 

as someone who is quite heavily into all things electrical im throughly enjoying the last few posts :) (well to be fair iv been thoroughly enjoying all the posts on this thread :) )

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...