1999 Accord with a 2000 Accord Engine
Back when I was hunting down an F23 to swap I remember seeing temp senders on 98s & 99s and plugs on 00s & up. Since temp was already being measured by the ECT, I'm guessing Honda saved a couple $$ by eliminating the sender and driving the temp gauge with a a bit of added circuitry in the ECU. I don't have a diagram so I don't know for sure.
Ok, So I got a new unit. The plug came out fine, but now I have turned the "top" off of it while putting it back in. not sure why this happened. The threads did not appear to be crossed and it was going in fine until, all of a sudden, off came the "top". The main body is still in the engine and it does not leak when the engine is running.
What to do now?
What to do now?
A couple of things you can do. 1) Leave it alone and live without a temp gauge. 2) Remove the broken sender with a bolt extractor.
#2 is often difficult. At the minimum the distributor would have to be pulled out and then a hole drilled precisely in the center of the broken sender. Even then bolt extractors sometimes don't work. And if it doesn't work then you're stuck with a hole in your cooling system and an undrivable car.
I think the sender is brass so it might come out fairly easily. Typically when bolt extractors don't work the solution is to just drill out the hole to the correct size and tap it to the correct diameter/thread pitch. IDK what the sender's thread is, if it's tapered British Pipe Thread like the oil pressure sender or just straight metric. In any case it's not a job to be taken lightly. An automotive machine shop could do the job.
#2 is often difficult. At the minimum the distributor would have to be pulled out and then a hole drilled precisely in the center of the broken sender. Even then bolt extractors sometimes don't work. And if it doesn't work then you're stuck with a hole in your cooling system and an undrivable car.
I think the sender is brass so it might come out fairly easily. Typically when bolt extractors don't work the solution is to just drill out the hole to the correct size and tap it to the correct diameter/thread pitch. IDK what the sender's thread is, if it's tapered British Pipe Thread like the oil pressure sender or just straight metric. In any case it's not a job to be taken lightly. An automotive machine shop could do the job.
Thanks, these are what I assumed my options were. For now I am going to live with no temp gauge. I know the thermostat and fans work so I don't really fear the car overheating. I may take it to the mechanic that does the bigger jobs on my cars but it is not urgent.
Thanks again for everyone's help.
Thanks again for everyone's help.
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