PhilipA
3rd March 2016, 03:50 PM
I recently went to Capertee for a Range Rover Club function in my TD5 and going up the Blue Mountains my Temp gauge dropped down to 1/3 while my dash LED showed normal( about 82C).
I stopped in a fuel station and wiggled the plug and it came good.
When I got to Capertee, I half removed the sound damper on the engine and squirted some LP gas into the socket, and cleaned up the prongs on the plug with a cotton bud wet with Metho. I have already cut a bit off the shroud and put split tube around the wiring to prevent chafing.
All is good now, and so I conclude that a bit of oil on the plug was causing a high resistance.
But I wonder what this did to the signal to the ECU, and what effect it has on a diesel to have a low temperature signal. I seem to have used much more fuel than normal, but I don't think it possible that the mixture would be richer. Does the injection timing change?
There is a thread from 2013 that recommends changing the Thermostat if the temp gauge reads low, but I reckon often it is just a dirty plug on the sensor. So check the plug first!
Regards Philip A
I stopped in a fuel station and wiggled the plug and it came good.
When I got to Capertee, I half removed the sound damper on the engine and squirted some LP gas into the socket, and cleaned up the prongs on the plug with a cotton bud wet with Metho. I have already cut a bit off the shroud and put split tube around the wiring to prevent chafing.
All is good now, and so I conclude that a bit of oil on the plug was causing a high resistance.
But I wonder what this did to the signal to the ECU, and what effect it has on a diesel to have a low temperature signal. I seem to have used much more fuel than normal, but I don't think it possible that the mixture would be richer. Does the injection timing change?
There is a thread from 2013 that recommends changing the Thermostat if the temp gauge reads low, but I reckon often it is just a dirty plug on the sensor. So check the plug first!
Regards Philip A