by John Quilter » Sat Feb 22, 2025 10:09 pm
On a recent short local journey my usually reliable tachometer failed to read on the return trip. There are two devices in this system, the tack head and the signal generator at the back of the intake cam. I had a spare generator so spun that up with a drill and it would light a small 12V bulb, proving it worked. Tried that with the one mounted on the engine and ran the engine, bulb did not light. Concluded my engine mounted generator was faulty or had become disconnected from the drive dog. (that had happened once before some 35 years ago!) Then using a spare NOS tachometer I tested that with a small AC model railroad transformer with varying AC voltage from 7-15. Proved that my spare tach would read, at least up to about 1400 RPM. Then the same test with the dash mounted tach so connected the transformer to the wires I disconnected from the engine mounted generator. My installed dash tach would not read anything. Then with my known good spare generator connected to the dash tach wires, spun up the generator with a drill, no reading on the dash tach. Final test was connecting my spare generator to my spare tach and spun the generator with my drill, and tach showed a reading. My conclusion is that BOTH the generator and dash instrument are faulty but I find that very strange that both components would fail at the same time. Currently awaiting Moss to sent me a replacement drive dog just in case I need it. May hire someone to do the generator and dash tach change, both look like a PITA jobs.
On a recent short local journey my usually reliable tachometer failed to read on the return trip. There are two devices in this system, the tack head and the signal generator at the back of the intake cam. I had a spare generator so spun that up with a drill and it would light a small 12V bulb, proving it worked. Tried that with the one mounted on the engine and ran the engine, bulb did not light. Concluded my engine mounted generator was faulty or had become disconnected from the drive dog. (that had happened once before some 35 years ago!) Then using a spare NOS tachometer I tested that with a small AC model railroad transformer with varying AC voltage from 7-15. Proved that my spare tach would read, at least up to about 1400 RPM. Then the same test with the dash mounted tach so connected the transformer to the wires I disconnected from the engine mounted generator. My installed dash tach would not read anything. Then with my known good spare generator connected to the dash tach wires, spun up the generator with a drill, no reading on the dash tach. Final test was connecting my spare generator to my spare tach and spun the generator with my drill, and tach showed a reading. My conclusion is that BOTH the generator and dash instrument are faulty but I find that very strange that both components would fail at the same time. Currently awaiting Moss to sent me a replacement drive dog just in case I need it. May hire someone to do the generator and dash tach change, both look like a PITA jobs.