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Restoring gauges article
Posted: Thu Apr 04, 2013 8:36 am
by David Bliss
I now belong to the Willys Overland Knight Registry. A member posted information about his restoration of the gauges on his car. The results were better than I have seen from some professionals, and you always get a sense of achievement by doing the work yourself. This link goes to a newsletter call The Running Board, which has published his account of the restoration
http://clubs.hemmings.com/eacc/RB.pdf. I thought it might be of interest and could help others.
Re: Restoring gauges article
Posted: Mon Apr 08, 2013 11:14 pm
by GOY189
Thanks David,
A most informative article
Regards
Mike
Re: Restoring gauges article
Posted: Thu Jun 18, 2015 8:06 pm
by Gordonhbm
David,
I have tried the link you posted (
http://clubs.hemmings.com/eacc/RB.pdf.) but it brings up the March 2015 edition and doesn't contain the article. Do you have a copy that you could email me as I am trying to calibrate a Hobson Telegage (petrol) and struggling! I have a freshley cleaned and dry system with a sender in good order but need to recalibrate the gauge. Previous owner had inserted 2 electrical grade copper wires .070" dia. which were corroded with a white deposit. I am replacing these with stainless steel wire. What diameter and length should they be. I have made a test tank to give me a column of liquid the same density as 95 Unleaded (equal in height to the full proper tank) and using a flexible pipe to the gauge head and immersing to bottom of tank I should get a "full" reading. However it only shows 1/2 full. With the flexible open to atmosphere the red liquid is on zero.
I can't work out whether I need more or less wires - I am assuming that with fewer wires more liquid should be pushed into the indicator part. Have I understood the principle correctly?
Many thanks for your help.