They sell little brass fittings that have a pipe fitting on one end that matches the fitting on your sending unit, and a fitting on the other end that the tubing goes to.
If you want to keep both, then buy a "T" that has one male pipe fitting for the block, and two female pipe fittings for the sending unit and tubing fitting.
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Yah lol i work for a blumber so i got the T thing lol, but where is the sending unit?? thats my prob i have no idea where im hookin it too, it came with the fittings.
Look by your distributor, you'll find a sensor with a wire on it...unscrew it, replace with what you got with the gauges and go from there.
Rene
Well, you are replacing an electric gauge with a mechanical one.
The electric one works just like your gas gauge.
There is a diaphragm inside the sensor with a spring. As the oil pressure builds, it pushes against that diaphragm and compresses the spring.
That moves a wiper across a resistor which changes the resistance in the circuit going to your present gauge.
Gas gauge works the same, except it uses a float to move the wiper.
So, your sender might be bad or changed values, the gauge might have electrical problems, or you could have a bad wire.
The new gauge eliminates all that. It just has tubing which carries the pressure to the gauge which moves against a spring.
Thus there is less to go wrong. Which is why you use a mechanical to check the electric one.
Well, naturally. You're a plumber, not an electrician.Lol damnit i was lookin high and low for a small piece of tubing not a wire lol.
