greenmachine Posted April 5, 2012 Share #1 Posted April 5, 2012 I have installed a 3 wire tach in my 71 240Z with stock L24, 280ZX ignition, and MSD Blaster 2 coil. I spliced the positive and ground wires into the original 4 wire tach harness, and ran a wire with a 2200 ohm resistor in line from the negative terminal on the coil to the tach.When I start the car the tach indicates what appears to be the correct RPM for 3 or 4 seconds, then drops to zero.Revving the engine results in a reading on the tach which seems to be too high (for example, about 2800 RPM at 60 with stock 4 speed and 3.36 axle).Also, whenever an electrical load is applied (turn signals, 4 way flasher, heater blower, headlights, any or all) the tach needle jumps to a higher RPM and back continuosly.Bad tach or did I miss someting in the installation? Link to comment https://www.classiczcars.com/topic/42859-3-wire-tach-problem/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveJ Posted April 5, 2012 Share #2 Posted April 5, 2012 I'd have to look at the wiring diagrams to be sure, but it sounds like a grounding issue to me. Link to comment https://www.classiczcars.com/topic/42859-3-wire-tach-problem/#findComment-386430 Share on other sites More sharing options...
greenmachine Posted April 6, 2012 Author Share #3 Posted April 6, 2012 I tried grounding directly to the negative battery terminal. No change in behavior! Link to comment https://www.classiczcars.com/topic/42859-3-wire-tach-problem/#findComment-386527 Share on other sites More sharing options...
greenmachine Posted April 6, 2012 Author Share #4 Posted April 6, 2012 SteveJ you were right! It took me awhile to figure it out, but the problem was with grounding.I finally realized the tach signal comes from the negative terminal of the coil, which, since it is negative, must also be grounded. I cleaned the back if the ignition module and the dizzy body where it attachs. When it was making a good contact with no corrosion the tach works perfectly! Link to comment https://www.classiczcars.com/topic/42859-3-wire-tach-problem/#findComment-386548 Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveJ Posted April 7, 2012 Share #5 Posted April 7, 2012 SteveJ you were right! It took me awhile to figure it out, but the problem was with grounding.I finally realized the tach signal comes from the negative terminal of the coil, which, since it is negative, must also be grounded. I cleaned the back if the ignition module and the dizzy body where it attachs. When it was making a good contact with no corrosion the tach works perfectly!I just pointed you in the right direction. You did the real problem solving. Link to comment https://www.classiczcars.com/topic/42859-3-wire-tach-problem/#findComment-386578 Share on other sites More sharing options...
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