mickywillis
Well-Known Member
RESLOVED!!! Yanmar 1GM10 Tachometer retrofit-help required please?
NOW RESOLVED!! See my last post. Thanks for the help, but the problem was fairly simple!
Have recently purchased a Type B control panel to fit to my 1GM10, which will finally give me a tachometer/recv counter (with any luck!)
On the front of the tacho is P=97 which I assume to be the number of teeth on the flywheel, can anyone confirm that this is the correct number of teeth on a 1GM10 flywheel ( or have a look at the tacho fitted to your boat if you have a 1GM10 and type B panel)
I have also purchased the item below:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/180941753...X:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1439.l2649#ht_3047wt_1091
This has been fitted into an adapter to fit the bellhousing where the correct Yanmar sensor would fit. I have correctly measured the air gap between the base of the sensor and the flywheel teeth to the gap given on the data sheet of the sensor.
Luckily I have an old 1GM10 at home in the garage which was purchased as a fixer upper due to head damage, so the head is off and the strter motor in place. In effect I can turn the engine over on the starter motor and get it spinning to a reasonable speed. Trying this to test the setup before I fit to my working engine.
Problem I have is the tacho just isn't reading. When I turn the ignition switch on, the needle on the tacho jumps up very slightly ( I believe this indicates the tacho is sensing correctly as it does not jump up when the battery is disconnected?) Engine spins over fine on the starter (not sure how many RPM's though) and teh B type panel seems to function correctly (warning lights, illumination and warning buzzer all work)
Question is this. Would the tacho show a reading when turning the motor over on the starter or is the RPM on cranking not quick enough?
Also, the sensor has 2 wires, a red and a green. Should one of these wires be connected to ground or is it sufficient to connect to the 2 wires as shown on the Yanmar wiring diagram to the 2 leads on the wiring harness. Is there any way of testing the output of the sensor without an oscilloscope to view the minimal voltage output or without causing damage to the sensor? I also assume that the Yanmar tacho has some sort of voltage amplifier to step up the output of the sensor to a level to convert to drive the tacho needle assembly.
Thanks in advance if you can assist.
NOW RESOLVED!! See my last post. Thanks for the help, but the problem was fairly simple!
Have recently purchased a Type B control panel to fit to my 1GM10, which will finally give me a tachometer/recv counter (with any luck!)
On the front of the tacho is P=97 which I assume to be the number of teeth on the flywheel, can anyone confirm that this is the correct number of teeth on a 1GM10 flywheel ( or have a look at the tacho fitted to your boat if you have a 1GM10 and type B panel)
I have also purchased the item below:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/180941753...X:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1439.l2649#ht_3047wt_1091
This has been fitted into an adapter to fit the bellhousing where the correct Yanmar sensor would fit. I have correctly measured the air gap between the base of the sensor and the flywheel teeth to the gap given on the data sheet of the sensor.
Luckily I have an old 1GM10 at home in the garage which was purchased as a fixer upper due to head damage, so the head is off and the strter motor in place. In effect I can turn the engine over on the starter motor and get it spinning to a reasonable speed. Trying this to test the setup before I fit to my working engine.
Problem I have is the tacho just isn't reading. When I turn the ignition switch on, the needle on the tacho jumps up very slightly ( I believe this indicates the tacho is sensing correctly as it does not jump up when the battery is disconnected?) Engine spins over fine on the starter (not sure how many RPM's though) and teh B type panel seems to function correctly (warning lights, illumination and warning buzzer all work)
Question is this. Would the tacho show a reading when turning the motor over on the starter or is the RPM on cranking not quick enough?
Also, the sensor has 2 wires, a red and a green. Should one of these wires be connected to ground or is it sufficient to connect to the 2 wires as shown on the Yanmar wiring diagram to the 2 leads on the wiring harness. Is there any way of testing the output of the sensor without an oscilloscope to view the minimal voltage output or without causing damage to the sensor? I also assume that the Yanmar tacho has some sort of voltage amplifier to step up the output of the sensor to a level to convert to drive the tacho needle assembly.
Thanks in advance if you can assist.
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