Jump to content
Email-only Log-Ins Coming in December ×

IGNORED

Series I oil pressure sender question


djwarner

Recommended Posts

My Series I has the original 140psig gauge and the sender was leaking when I bought the car. A trip to the local auto supply store sourced a compatible (?) sender.

Later I found out that the original sender part number was superseded with the same part number as the ones found on Series II and later cars.

Still later, I found out that the shop instructions state to also replace the gauge with a 90psig when replacing with the superseded sender. This makes sense for the then modern model car, but sucks when trying to restore a 43 year old car and desire to keep the original gauge.

From what I can tell, the original sender was a 10 Bar sender (10 atmospheres or 145psig) and the replacement sender is a 6 Bar sender (87 psig).

So what readings do I get when I use a 6 Bar sender and a 10 Bar gauge?

I did find a modern 6 bar sender that had the following specs:

6-8psig open circuit (this explains why our gauges go to zero when idling after a hot run).

15 psig - 50-79 ohms,

70 psig - 10-30 ohms,

90 psig - 8-22 ohms.

I have no idea what the original sender specs were, but the 6 Bar specs seem pretty loose.

Does any one have specs for the 10 Bar sender?

Or better yet, does anyone know of a suitable sender from a different model/make?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I replaced my series I oil sending unit PN 25070-89910 in 1979 with the correct 10 KG OEM switch and it stills seems to read OK on the 140 psi gauge. Attached is a parts page showing different PN's for the 10 KG and 6 KG units. Is there a date on shop instructions sheet that you have? Sorry I don't have any specs for the 10 KG sender.

post-8626-14150829837342_thumb.jpg

Mike

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sorry about that, good luck on your search on an NOS part, maybe you will get lucky. I did a quick search and saw this on ebay, no idea if this is a good vendor:

Vintage Nissan Oil Pressure Sender Part Number 25070 89910 | eBay

Sorry, just noticed it was an old auction, but at least they do come up, cheers.

Edited by CanTechZ
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello dj,

This may, or may not help, but here is what I have found in trying to understand the inherently low pressure readings on series 1 cars.

Here is what Wick Humble in his book "How to Restore Your Datsun Z-Car" had to say. By the way, this low pressure reading is, indeed,

inherent to our early cars as this low pressure anomaly was present the day I drove it off the lot with zero miles on the clock.

My car has the 140 psi gage and the 25070-89910 10kg sender switch. I asked my mechanic to check my oil pressure with

his mechanical gage and these were the reading:

Idle - 22 psi

3500 RPM - 64 psi

My stock 140 psi gage and 25070 - 89910 sender the reading are:

Idle - 0 psi

3500 RPM - 35 to 40 psi

My car is 100% stock with a pretty tight engine with approximately 5M miles on it. My compression readings are 167, 166, 168,

176, 167, & 175 for cylinders 1 thru 6 respectively.

I have peace of mind knowing that zero psi really means at least 22 psi as everything on my car will always remain factory stock.

I also know that many mechanics, to give owners peace of mind, would install a roadster sender which will always give a

positive reading. I used one for a time, but don't remember what the specific readings were except that it was always positive.

I hope this helps in your quest for a sender.

Dan

post-2148-1415082983859_thumb.jpg

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Dan,

Your attachment confirms what I have found.

I was hoping someone found a 10 Bar sender from a different application that would work.

Many modern senders appear to be voltage based rather than current based, so finding a substitute sensor may be problematic. I will probably rig up a 500 ohm pot to simulate a sender to extract a set of specs for my search.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the heads up Jim. He states the unit he has is for 70-76 models and is probably the 6 bar unit as the 10 bar unit was only used in the 69-70 production.

I made some tests on the gauge. It appears to be looking for:

0 psi - 83 ohms

25 psi - 60 ohms

50 psi - 40 ohms

90 psi - 24 ohms

A note to anyone trying this, the water temp/oil pressure gauge has an internal voltage regulator that is a bi-metal mechanical type that is to slow for our digital meters.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 years later...
On 8/26/2014 at 4:14 AM, AZ-240z said:

Hello dj,

This may, or may not help, but here is what I have found in trying to understand the inherently low pressure readings on series 1 cars.

Here is what Wick Humble in his book "How to Restore Your Datsun Z-Car" had to say. By the way, this low pressure reading is, indeed,

inherent to our early cars as this low pressure anomaly was present the day I drove it off the lot with zero miles on the clock.

My car has the 140 psi gage and the 25070-89910 10kg sender switch. I asked my mechanic to check my oil pressure with

his mechanical gage and these were the reading:

Idle - 22 psi

3500 RPM - 64 psi

My stock 140 psi gage and 25070 - 89910 sender the reading are:

Idle - 0 psi

3500 RPM - 35 to 40 psi

My car is 100% stock with a pretty tight engine with approximately 5M miles on it. My compression readings are 167, 166, 168,

176, 167, & 175 for cylinders 1 thru 6 respectively.

I have peace of mind knowing that zero psi really means at least 22 psi as everything on my car will always remain factory stock.

I also know that many mechanics, to give owners peace of mind, would install a roadster sender which will always give a

positive reading. I used one for a time, but don't remember what the specific readings were except that it was always positive.

I hope this helps in your quest for a sender.

Dan

post-2148-1415082983859_thumb.jpg

Hi Dan , your  data helps everyone a lot  , I was also wondering too about the low readings of the oil pressure. My first Z is a 1972 240Z when I was living in Bakers Field CA which always showing middle in the gauge. Then I bought a 1970 240Z , it always stayed very low in the gauge.

I remember I was reading Mr. Wick Humble ‘s book and learned  my 1970 car was not wrong .

Here are pictures which were taken recently, my 1970 Z432 ( shared with all the other S30 DOM & EXPORT using the same 10kg switch , 10kg scale ) and 1970 Datsun 240Z , And 1972 Fairlady 240ZG ( 6kg switch with 6kg scale ) .

Just for your reference.

By the way , 25070-89910 ( 10kg ) switch is now approximately 200-400 USD if it is a new , S20 owners are seriously want it . 

Looking at my Z432 , S20 might able to be said it’s oil pressure relatively higher than L -series engine , what do you think of it. 

Kats

695444B9-EEC1-4048-83AA-9CD9315E3B4C.jpeg

281AFA46-C09F-41D2-B97A-103E8503AB57.jpeg

EEEDFF3B-C0B7-4CB8-A09E-1AC0DCED010D.jpeg

9883D5EC-5FED-42AC-9A02-9DFEBEE0E344.jpeg

C32CF867-B5A3-495F-9F83-F99080EE2AEA.jpeg

108B954F-C638-4869-BE5F-E2F93D132B0C.jpeg

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Who's Online   2 Members, 0 Anonymous, 512 Guests (See full list)

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Guidelines. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.