Omega Owners Forum

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  

News:

Search the maintenance guides for answers to 99.999% of Omega questions

Pages: 1 [2]  All   Go Down

Author Topic: Voltmeter & Ammeter  (Read 3609 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

DC

  • Intermediate Member
  • ***
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Switzerland
  • Posts: 301
    • View Profile
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #15 on: 21 July 2008, 21:50:38 »

oil pressure and voltage gauge
Logged

Phil B

  • Junior Member
  • **
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • South Wales
  • Posts: 237
    • View Profile
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #16 on: 25 July 2008, 00:24:21 »

Already got them in the Scimmy  :)
Logged

Auto Addict

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • North Birmingham
  • Posts: 13554
  • Back to Vx to keep TB happy
    • Astra K Elite ST
    • View Profile
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #17 on: 25 July 2008, 07:22:07 »

Thanks for all the replies, I'm still going to abandon the idea.
Logged
I like red cars

philhoward

  • Senior Member
  • ****
  • Offline Offline
  • Staffs
  • Posts: 939
  • Love the engines, so put one in something else..
    • View Profile
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #18 on: 26 July 2008, 07:44:00 »

Quote
Already got them in the Scimmy  :)

I preferred the ammeter in my 5 rather than the volmeter in my 5a's...but prefer the 5 dash anyway!
Logged
Running an X30XE in a Reliant Scimitar GTE as I can't have an Omega as a company car...

Taxi_Driver

  • Guest
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #19 on: 27 July 2008, 18:20:09 »

Quote
I am very interested in how anybody plans to connect an ammeter to a car which takes 200Amps cranking, upto 120 amps when running and still expects to see sub 1 amp draw when its turned off......plus what is proposed to be use as the measuring shunt without affecting the operation of everything!  :y

Now im guessing a bit here.......but there are 3 wires coming off the + batt terminal.......I assume one is feed to the starter.....one feed from the alternator and the other feed for the accessories.

If the case then you would only need to use the accessories wire.

Something like this would do i guess.....and i notice they do a solid shunt.....would this be better?  :-/

http://www.dpmeters.co.uk/DCDualmeterDPM62VA.htm

I am assuming the meter is auto scaling, if so you could see small a small drain when ign off  :-/
Logged

Bandit127

  • Guest
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #20 on: 27 July 2008, 19:34:07 »

Quote
I am very interested in how anybody plans to connect an ammeter to a car which takes 200Amps cranking, upto 120 amps when running and still expects to see sub 1 amp draw when its turned off......plus what is proposed to be use as the measuring shunt without affecting the operation of everything!  :y
A decent shunt resistor between the battry and alternator would give the same info as mini coopers (and others) used to have. Charging current.
http://www.reuk.co.uk/What-is-a-Shunt.htm
No good for stationary current drain though.

I suspect there is a way to hijack the MID/ODBII system - but no idea how. There is probably spare I/O in the ECU though.

Also, armed with an RS catalogue, some Veroboard and a soldering iron you could probably make a small LCD/LED digital unit that would be easier to find space for. The ashtray space comes to mind.


Logged

Taxi_Driver

  • Guest
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #21 on: 27 July 2008, 20:46:03 »

Quote
Quote
I am very interested in how anybody plans to connect an ammeter to a car which takes 200Amps cranking, upto 120 amps when running and still expects to see sub 1 amp draw when its turned off......plus what is proposed to be use as the measuring shunt without affecting the operation of everything!  :y
A decent shunt resistor between the battry and alternator would give the same info as mini coopers (and others) used to have. Charging current.
http://www.reuk.co.uk/What-is-a-Shunt.htm
No good for stationary current drain though.

I suspect there is a way to hijack the MID/ODBII system - but no idea how. There is probably spare I/O in the ECU though.

Also, armed with an RS catalogue, some Veroboard and a soldering iron you could probably make a small LCD/LED digital unit that would be easier to find space for. The ashtray space comes to mind.



Absolutely  :y

Thats the reason i mentioned the 3 wires......as said im guessing why the three wires........but if one of them is for accessories.......this wire would do nicely  :y
Logged

Kevin Wood

  • Global Moderator
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • Alton, Hampshire
  • Posts: 36387
    • Jaguar XE 25t, Westfield
    • View Profile
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #22 on: 28 July 2008, 00:34:28 »

The problem is, you want the measure the battery current in / out not the current consumed by the accessories. You want to ignore the starter motor feed since the huge current this will take is going to be a pain. So, you'd need to separate the alternator and starter connections to the battery (currently a single wire right across the engine bay) and separate the accessories from the starter at the battery and insert a shunt so you're measuring the charge current into / accessory draw from the battery.

All a bit of a pain. You still probably won't measure with enough resolution to spot the 100mA of current that'll flatten your battery because you'll have to make the shunt big enough to measure up to the full alternator output (140 amps in my case).

I have an LED bar graph meter that plugs into the ciggy lighter and instantly shows the voltage, on the other hand. A couple of greens indicates a fully charged battery. Crank it, watching how much drop there is and then watch a few more green lights appear as the alternator wakes up. Turn on some loads and watch for voltage drop. Overcharging? Red light. Tells me all I need to know about the electrical system (which are pretty reliable these days, TBH) without messing about at all.

If I need to know currents, I have a clamp-on ammeter, or a multimeter for tracing small currents.

Kevin
Logged
Tech2 services currently available. See TheBoy's price list: http://theboy.omegaowners.com/

Auto Addict

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Gender: Male
  • North Birmingham
  • Posts: 13554
  • Back to Vx to keep TB happy
    • Astra K Elite ST
    • View Profile
Re: Voltmeter & Ammeter
« Reply #23 on: 28 July 2008, 06:43:49 »

Quote
The problem is, you want the measure the battery current in / out not the current consumed by the accessories. You want to ignore the starter motor feed since the huge current this will take is going to be a pain. So, you'd need to separate the alternator and starter connections to the battery (currently a single wire right across the engine bay) and separate the accessories from the starter at the battery and insert a shunt so you're measuring the charge current into / accessory draw from the battery.

All a bit of a pain. You still probably won't measure with enough resolution to spot the 100mA of current that'll flatten your battery because you'll have to make the shunt big enough to measure up to the full alternator output (140 amps in my case).

I have an LED bar graph meter that plugs into the ciggy lighter and instantly shows the voltage, on the other hand. A couple of greens indicates a fully charged battery. Crank it, watching how much drop there is and then watch a few more green lights appear as the alternator wakes up. Turn on some loads and watch for voltage drop. Overcharging? Red light. Tells me all I need to know about the electrical system (which are pretty reliable these days, TBH) without messing about at all.

If I need to know currents, I have a clamp-on ammeter, or a multimeter for tracing small currents.

Kevin

Makes a lot of sense Kevin.
Logged
I like red cars
Pages: 1 [2]  All   Go Up
 

Page created in 0.017 seconds with 17 queries.