LanduytG wrote:
I guess I don't understand way you want a temp prob. The temp sensor in the Racor is built into the bowl. As for testing the water sensor you need to diconnect the sensor of the OE harness. Then stick the wire into a glass of well water or the like. If the light goes on then all you need to do is get the Racor probe and hook it up to the OE harness. If you have to have the OE sensor on the )OE harness to make the light go on then you will need the whole Racor WIF kit.
Now for the heater. Check the voltage on the OE harness with the switch on and see if you have voltage. If so the the temp sensor in the bowl will take care of it. But what I'm willing to bet is you will not have voltage unless its cold out. I bet the ECM is controlling it. Which is still OK its just that the ECM will do the controlling instead of the bowl sensor.
We have used hundreds of Racor filter heads and they all work the same. WIF sucks and is very sensitive.
Greg
Greg, the reason I wanted to replace the temp sensor is from the manual:
An negative temperature coefficient (NTC) resistor..
integrated in the fuel temperature sensor alters it’s
electrical resistance in line with the fuel temperature
(the resistance drops as the temperature rises). The
ECM uses this reading to calculate optimum engine
performance under all driving conditions. If the fuel
is to warm, the rail pressure in the system is lowered.
The controlled quantity of the fuel rail pressure
solenoid is reduced and the fuel temperature is lowered
So, basically, I wanted to make sure that this is as plug-and-play as possible and don't want to short-circuit any safety measures on the engine. I don't know what the behavior of the engine is if the sensor is unplugged, if it throws the CEL, etc. Just trying to avoid that headache.
As for the temp sensor on a racor being in the bowl... their docs look like they have a heater and/of WIF sensor in the bowl. On the factory unit, that's a PTC resistor type that's "always on". It's triggered below 45F and is completely off if above 85F and is powered by the glow plug module and relay. The factory temp sensor is actually the same kind of device, but I think has a MUCH lower resistance and has a curve between -40C and 140C.
Is the WIF really that useless? I got the impression from the CAT conversion thread that only the MOPAR one stunk
- Again, first diesel here... just trying to apply good engineering principles to make it last longer and stay serviceable.
Dan
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2005 Silver CRD Limited

245/75R16 GoodYear Duratracs
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