2 wire sensors are purely resistance based. This is the only thing that matters when taking measurements.macromraco wrote:Sorry,I believe I didn't explain it very well.stevieturbo wrote:You CANNOT wire 2 wire sensors to two different devices and expect them to work as normal.
If the temperature sensor is wired ONLY to the gauge, hot fluid - 55ºC - is read as 3,75v (according to a working voltmeter hooked to the sensor wires).
If the sensor is removed from the gauge, then wired ONLY to the ECU, heat se same fluid to the same 55ºC as before and put the sensor in it, the reading changes to 2v (according to eot1V), even the temperature being the same as it was when tested with the gauge.
The 2 wire sensor was not wired to two or more devices at the same time (as you instructed before - to choose only one of them gauge OR ECU), and I get the different readings above.
Thanks,
How any voltage is then created will depend on the device it is attached to. This may vary with each device depending what voltage it applies across the sensor to take its readings.
You cannot compare the gauge to the ecu, or indeed a voltmeter. They all measure the resistance of the sensor, but may do it in slightly different ways
If you know for sure the temperature is 55degC, then you can view the voltage on the Syvecs/EOT1V and this will create one point on your linearisation scaling.
Do the same for as many different temperatures as possible and build your scaling for that sensor.