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So I've been working on cleaning up several discrepancies on my new to me 1987 J20 with a 360. When I bought it, it showed no oil pressure. It ran fine and in my experience that's an indicating issue since you obviously can't run very long with 0 psi of oil pressure.
I bought a new sending unit from BJ's and replaced it. Still nothing although I did get a few flickers of gauge movement and then nothing after that again. I put a piece of wire into the connector and grounded it against the chasis. The oil pressure gauge pegged out at 80. So it would seem that everything from that wire connector to the gauge is good right?
Should I replace the sending unit again assuming I just got a bad one? Is there a threshold of accuracy where if it's actually kinda low it will just read zero? My next thought was to go ahead and buy a mechanical oil pressure gauge and check it with that. Not to mount, but just the tool for troubleshooting and diagnostics.
I've read that the 360 oil pumps can be a real problem after even 40 or 50 thousand miles. Seems the oil pump gears wear the internals of the pump badly enough to affect pressure to the block. There's a oil pump rebuild kit for the 360 that looks to be a fairly easy job. After you verify with a mechanical gauge, if no pressure or very low pressure, I'd rebuild that oil pump.
1979 Cherokee Chief S, V8, MSD Pro Billet Distributor with New Factory Ignition Box (are these 2 even supposed to work together?), HEI Wires, Edelbrock 1406, Edelbrock Performer manifold, 3.54 gears, Tru-Trac Locker in the rear, Turbo 400, New Quadratrac, Dual gas tanks, new 32 x 11.50's, Big 9000 winch, Homemade 2.5" full length exhaust, Custom Headlight Harness, Custom front bumper working, Custom Rear Swing-out Bumper, Class V receiver hitch ... and a lot of work to do yet.
You should really just ditch the factory gauge and go with a good aftermarket gauge, either electrical or mechanical. The new aftermarket electric gauges are WAY better than the stuff our rigs ever came with. Even a functioning factory gauge should not be trusted: for entertainment purposes only.
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1983 J-10 - 4.6L(MPFI)/CS130D/Hydroboost/NV3550/D300/44/44/3.54/Disc-Disc/32s/42 gallon 'burb tank
JeepManiac wrote:
I bought a new sending unit from BJ's and replaced it. Still nothing although I did get a few flickers of gauge movement and then nothing after that again. I put a piece of wire into the connector and grounded it against the chasis. The oil pressure gauge pegged out at 80. So it would seem that everything from that wire connector to the gauge is good right?
You have a wiring issue. On ‘86-up disconnecting the sender wire should peg the gauge 80psi+ grounding it should zero gauge.
JeepManiac wrote:
I bought a new sending unit from BJ's and replaced it. Still nothing although I did get a few flickers of gauge movement and then nothing after that again. I put a piece of wire into the connector and grounded it against the chasis. The oil pressure gauge pegged out at 80. So it would seem that everything from that wire connector to the gauge is good right?
You have a wiring issue. On ‘86-up disconnecting the sender wire should peg the gauge 80psi+ grounding it should zero gauge.
I was trying to understand this so I went out and just checked it disconnected thinking that maybe it wasn't a good ground anyway. Sure enough unplugged the gauge showed like under 80 but most of the way up. Although I swear when I checked the other night it legitimately pegged all the way. Still seems a little screwy
Im not sure what year the Oil gauges changed but I have had to add reisistors to some gauges to get them to read correctly. I know because I added the resistors to get the correct reading and then years later I replaced the instrument panel and had to remove the resistors. I salvage a lot of FSJ and refuse to buy new for my vehicles--I guess Im a Cheap-A$$