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  • Electric 101 Question

    Let's use a thermoswitch as the example circuit. You suspect the high temp alarm is giving a false positive. Could someone detail for me the electrical pathway of this circuit when the engine temp is normal and when high temp is detected.

    If need be for this particular example, assume the load wire is BLK/GREY and ground is BLK.
    Jason
    1998 S115TLRW + 1976 Aquasport 170

  • #2
    Not exactly sure what you are asking, but, I "think" black/Gray gets grounded via the thermo "switch" activating a light or alarm, and possibly reducing RPM! is that what you're asking?

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    • #3
      I would think it depends on what motor you are talking about.
      but in general the switch closes when overheat temp is reached and that grounds the wire causing buzzer and RPM reduction, so it would need to tell the CDI/ECU along with set off the buzzer

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Jason2tpa View Post
        Let's use a thermoswitch as the example circuit. You suspect the high temp alarm is giving a false positive. Could someone detail for me the electrical pathway of this circuit when the engine temp is normal and when high temp is detected.
        The wire on one side is "hot" (from - indirectly - the positive side of the battery)
        The other wire is "grounded" - same as the negative side of the battery


        Its a "normally open" switch ("NO") so at room temperature -
        or any temperature below the designed actuation point -
        no current flows through it
        also expresses as "there is no continuity through it"

        Once its temperature rises to the trigger point, it "closes"
        and current flows from the hot side to ground.

        Now typically in our 4 stroke EFI engines,
        the "hot" side wire comes from the ECU
        so when the switch closes and that current flows to ground
        the ECU recognizes a specific "input" and reacts accordingly

        on my F225TXRD, the thermoswitches have a pink and a black wire
        the black goes to ground
        the pink comes directly from pin # 37 of the ECU

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        • #5
          Maybe seeing it graphically might help with the understanding of the system operation;

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          • #6
            Originally posted by fairdeal View Post
            Its a "normally open" switch ("NO") so at room temperature - or any temperature below the designed actuation point -
            no current flows through it also expresses as "there is no continuity through it"

            Once its temperature rises to the trigger point, it "closes" and current flows from the hot side to ground.
            Perfect. The description I was hoping to receive. Thks!
            Jason
            1998 S115TLRW + 1976 Aquasport 170

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by boscoe99 View Post
              Maybe seeing it graphically might help with the understanding of the system operation;

              As usual bossman, your illustrations never disappoint. And yes, visualization tools work the best for my brain. Keep'um coming. Big thanks as always.
              Jason
              1998 S115TLRW + 1976 Aquasport 170

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