C4 Tech/Performance L98 Corvette and LT1 Corvette Technical Info, Internal Engine, External Engine

Oil pressure sensor .....again!

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Apr 25, 2012 | 04:02 AM
  #1  
Troppo's Avatar
Troppo
Thread Starter
Cruising
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 12
Likes: 0
From: Townsville QLD
Default Oil pressure sensor .....again!

Ok ,I know there are topics about the oil sensor leaking, ect. However none of them I have seen have discribed how to put a new one in without removeing the dizzy. It sounds like people have, but I need to do this to my C4 and would love to know "the easy way"!
Reply
Old Apr 25, 2012 | 04:54 AM
  #2  
65Z01's Avatar
65Z01
Team Owner
20 Year Member
 
Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 90,675
Likes: 304
From: SE NY
Cruise-In II Veteran
Default

If you can get a wrench onto the sensor all is fine; if not then remove the dist.

When removing the dist:
-remove the cap
-mark where the rotor is pointing
-mark the edge of the dist & a corresponding mark on the manifold
-when the dist gear just clears the cam gear, put another mark where teh rotor in now pointing.

These marks will assure easy reinstallation.
Reply
Old Apr 25, 2012 | 03:17 PM
  #3  
trackbird's Avatar
trackbird
Racer
 
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 456
Likes: 4
From: Columbus Oh
Default

If you are speaking of the oil sending unit beside the distributor that operates the "check gauges" light, it's not too bad (I just changed mine). Go to NAPA and pick up a sensor installation socket (I want to say it's 1 1/8", but I can look when I get home). Use a ratchet and extension and loosen the old one (remove by hand), start the new one by hand and snug with the sensor socket and extension. I couldn't get anything else in my toolbox (and I own a lot of tools) into that area to loosen the sensor but the socket makes it a simple swap.
Reply
Old Apr 26, 2012 | 03:04 AM
  #4  
Troppo's Avatar
Troppo
Thread Starter
Cruising
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 12
Likes: 0
From: Townsville QLD
Default

Thanks guys, I'm hoping I can get that socket on it!.....for now
Reply
Old Apr 26, 2012 | 09:07 AM
  #5  
Muffin's Avatar
Muffin
Race Director
Supporting Lifetime Gold
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jun 1999
Posts: 14,924
Likes: 9
From: Merritt Ils Fl
Default

A word of caution: The sensors have a very fine thread, be very careful when screwing in the new sensor. Easy to cross thread, tough to fix when you do. Please don't ask me how I gained this bit of automobile knowledge.
Reply
Old Apr 26, 2012 | 09:40 AM
  #6  
trackbird's Avatar
trackbird
Racer
 
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 456
Likes: 4
From: Columbus Oh
Default

Also, there are two sensors that look the same. On my '91 (other years could be different) that sensor only had one pin in the socket. That is for the oil light, not the gauge. If you get the three pin version (the sensor looks otherwise identical) you will have a check gauges light on the dash. Make sure of the pin count in the connector and get the correct sender with the right number of pins.
Reply
Old Apr 26, 2012 | 11:15 PM
  #7  
senorv47's Avatar
senorv47
Pro
 
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 727
Likes: 0
From: Ocean City Maryland
Default 88 Vette

Got both the light and pressure senors replaced by my Mech while I watched and while there was alittle cussing and a mention of converting to being a Ford Man, LOL. he reached them from the drivers side with his leg in between the tire and the frame and lossening of the Dist Cap. He attacked them both from the top with his partner on the pass side for some support in threading them on. But he got them done in 15 minutes.
Reply
Old Apr 28, 2012 | 03:42 AM
  #8  
Troppo's Avatar
Troppo
Thread Starter
Cruising
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 12
Likes: 0
From: Townsville QLD
Default

Yeeehhhhaaarrr!! I just unscrewed the oil sensor using a 27mm open-ender, straight on, using pliers to turn it....and it worked!
I even reinstalled it !......Now waiting for the new sensor.....
Reply
Corvette Stories

The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts

story-0

Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

 Michael S. Palmer
story-1

Top 10 Most Explosive Corvettes Ever Made: Power-to-Weight Ratio Ranked!

 Joe Kucinski
story-2

150 hp to 1,250 hp: Every Corvette Generation Compared by the Specs That Matter

 Joe Kucinski
story-3

8 Coolest Corvette Pace Cars (and Replicas) of All Time

 Verdad Gallardo
story-4

Top 10 Corvette Engines RANKED by Peak Torque (70+ Years of Muscle!)

 Joe Kucinski
story-5

Corvette ZR1X Will Be Pacing the Indy 500, And Could Probably Race, Too!

 Verdad Gallardo
story-6

Top 10 Corvettes Coming to Mecum Indy 2026!

 Brett Foote
story-7

Top 10 C9 Corvette MUST-HAVES to Fix These C8 Generation Flaws!

 Michael S. Palmer
story-8

10 Revolutionary 'Corvette Firsts' Most People Don't Know

 Joe Kucinski
story-9

5 Reasons to Upgrade to an LS6-Powered Corvette; 5 Reasons to Stay LT2

 Michael S. Palmer
Old Apr 28, 2012 | 08:11 AM
  #9  
XR_Strider_GuY's Avatar
XR_Strider_GuY
Racer
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 304
Likes: 0
From: Victoria Australia
Default

Originally Posted by Troppo
Yeeehhhhaaarrr!! I just unscrewed the oil sensor using a 27mm open-ender, straight on, using pliers to turn it....and it worked!
I even reinstalled it !......Now waiting for the new sensor.....
Hi Troppo,
Good to see you joined up on this forum mate. Hope it all goes well for you. Where are you getting the sensor from?
Reply
Old Apr 28, 2012 | 03:31 PM
  #10  
senorv47's Avatar
senorv47
Pro
 
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 727
Likes: 0
From: Ocean City Maryland
Default

Originally Posted by Troppo
Yeeehhhhaaarrr!! I just unscrewed the oil sensor using a 27mm open-ender, straight on, using pliers to turn it....and it worked!
I even reinstalled it !......Now waiting for the new sensor.....
Which sensor do you need? I have a brand new light sensor I am not using? On the 88 there are two. One for the light and one for the oil pressure gage
Reply
Old Apr 28, 2012 | 10:31 PM
  #11  
C4boy's Avatar
C4boy
Melting Slicks
20 Year Member
Conversation Starter
All Eyes On Me
 
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 3,110
Likes: 6
From: Red Sox Nation! RI
Default

Assuming you mean the oil pressure sending unit, just remove the wiper motor and you'll have enough room to replace the sending unit. The wiper motor's easy enough to remove.
Reply
Old Apr 28, 2012 | 11:08 PM
  #12  
Troppo's Avatar
Troppo
Thread Starter
Cruising
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 12
Likes: 0
From: Townsville QLD
Default

Thanks for the offer, but I've already ordered a new one.
Hi Gary, A lot of good info in here, thanks for the tip!
I ordered from USGM (Dave)....2 weeks ago..
Reply
Old May 1, 2012 | 09:17 AM
  #13  
Skoooby's Avatar
Skoooby
Intermediate
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 45
Likes: 0
Default

My "Check Gauges" light illuminates infrequently and I was told it is a bad oil pressure sensor.

Can someone please explain to me what is the difference between a sensor and a switch, and what is the sending unit?

Also, can someone please write the p/n for a 1996 oil pressure sensor?
I want to make sure I am ordering the right one.

Thank you all!
Reply
Old May 1, 2012 | 02:07 PM
  #14  
trackbird's Avatar
trackbird
Racer
 
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 456
Likes: 4
From: Columbus Oh
Default

Originally Posted by Skoooby
My "Check Gauges" light illuminates infrequently and I was told it is a bad oil pressure sensor.

Can someone please explain to me what is the difference between a sensor and a switch, and what is the sending unit?

Also, can someone please write the p/n for a 1996 oil pressure sensor?
I want to make sure I am ordering the right one.

Thank you all!
The sensor generates a variable output that the gauge translates into the various oil pressure readings it displays (the sensor is a resistor and it's variable based on oil pressure). The switch is "on or off" and turns the light on or off based on if it has enough oil pressure or not. The switch is used to turn on the "check gauges" light, the sensor is used to run the oil pressure gauge. The switch has a single pin for the output (though the connector looks like the three pin connector for other GM oil pressure sending units...just without the other pin holes). My local NAPA store looked up the two units and ordered the switch for the light instead of the sender for the gauge. They should list both.
Reply
Old May 2, 2012 | 01:52 AM
  #15  
Skoooby's Avatar
Skoooby
Intermediate
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 45
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by trackbird
The sensor generates a variable output that the gauge translates into the various oil pressure readings it displays (the sensor is a resistor and it's variable based on oil pressure). The switch is "on or off" and turns the light on or off based on if it has enough oil pressure or not. The switch is used to turn on the "check gauges" light, the sensor is used to run the oil pressure gauge. The switch has a single pin for the output (though the connector looks like the three pin connector for other GM oil pressure sending units...just without the other pin holes). My local NAPA store looked up the two units and ordered the switch for the light instead of the sender for the gauge. They should list both.
Thank you.
It means that if the oil pressure sensor is bad, it makes the switch go crazy and then the light on my dash illuminates. Is that correct?

I found this for AC Delco:
http://www.bestvalueautoparts.com/Re...h_W_Light.html

The first, the second and the last items on this link show the same part, so do you know why there are listed separately and their pics are from different angels?
Reply
Old May 2, 2012 | 07:44 AM
  #16  
trackbird's Avatar
trackbird
Racer
 
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 456
Likes: 4
From: Columbus Oh
Default

The sensors look the same, the main way to tell them apart is the connector. They show connectors there, but they are all 3 pin. The 3 pin connector is for the gauge (if you only wired the center pin it could work for the oil pressure sending unit, but it's not the "correct" connector). I know NAPA listed both for my '91 and had it for me in a day (if you're in the states, I didn't see your location). Might be the easiest approach. The sender for the gauge was about $25, the one for the light was about $10.
Reply
Old May 2, 2012 | 10:03 PM
  #17  
rodj's Avatar
rodj
Le Mans Master
25 Year Member
 
Joined: Aug 2000
Posts: 8,838
Likes: 31
From: Australia
Default

Originally Posted by trackbird
The switch is "on or off" and turns the light on or off based on if it has enough oil pressure or not.
The switch is used to turn on the "check gauges" light, the sensor is used to run the oil pressure gauge.
Wrong
On a '86 ;the single wire "big can" sender is the gauges sender ;
the separate 2 wire switch is to run the fuel pump should the pump relay fail
Later ('88 +? ) cars have a single 3 wire unit combining the switch and gauges sender
while ('91+? ) have a separate 1 wire unit for the analog OP gauge as well as the 3 wire unit mentioned
Reply

Get notified of new replies

To Oil pressure sensor .....again!

Old May 3, 2012 | 07:41 PM
  #18  
Corvette40's Avatar
Corvette40
Racer
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 361
Likes: 6
Default

Originally Posted by rodj
Wrong
On a '86 ;the single wire "big can" sender is the gauges sender ;
the separate 2 wire switch is to run the fuel pump should the pump relay fail
Later ('88 +? ) cars have a single 3 wire unit combining the switch and gauges sender
while ('91+? ) have a separate 1 wire unit for the analog OP gauge as well as the 3 wire unit mentioned
The 88 has the same single blade canister type oil pressure sender that the 87 does. The longer black two wire switch is the oil pressure switch. When looking to replace the pressure sender on my 88 they kept giving the the 89 and up 3 wire switch that incorporates the pressure sender and pressure switch in one device. I asked for one for an 87 and it has been working fine for 2 years now.
When I replace the engine next month, I'm going to install the three wire switch down by the oil temp sender by the oil filter like the 3rd Gens have. We just did this on a FIRST install and it works fine.
Reply
Old May 3, 2012 | 10:09 PM
  #19  
Corvette40's Avatar
Corvette40
Racer
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 361
Likes: 6
Default

Originally Posted by trackbird
If you are speaking of the oil sending unit beside the distributor that operates the "check gauges" light, it's not too bad (I just changed mine). Go to NAPA and pick up a sensor installation socket (I want to say it's 1 1/8", but I can look when I get home). Use a ratchet and extension and loosen the old one (remove by hand), start the new one by hand and snug with the sensor socket and extension. I couldn't get anything else in my toolbox (and I own a lot of tools) into that area to loosen the sensor but the socket makes it a simple swap.



Did it this exact same way. It helps if you have small hands too.
Reply
Old May 4, 2012 | 01:15 PM
  #20  
trackbird's Avatar
trackbird
Racer
 
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 456
Likes: 4
From: Columbus Oh
Default

Originally Posted by rodj
Wrong
On a '86 ;the single wire "big can" sender is the gauges sender ;
the separate 2 wire switch is to run the fuel pump should the pump relay fail
Later ('88 +? ) cars have a single 3 wire unit combining the switch and gauges sender
while ('91+? ) have a separate 1 wire unit for the analog OP gauge as well as the 3 wire unit mentioned
I guess I should have specified that this was on my '91. The "can" style sender is one I'm familiar with from an old '87 Camaro (and my days working in parts stores).

When I disconnected the single wire connector on my car, the check gauges light went out. This was because there was a 3 wire sender in my engine that had two pins bent over and the third pin was grounding the check gauges light (normally open switch in the "wrong" sender and normally closed in the proper single pin switch). The oil pressure gauge (on my '91) worked just fine with the single wire connector unplugged (and the check gauges light went out since it was no longer being grounded by the incorrect sending unit). This leads me to believe that the 3 pin connector has the oil pressure gauge and the fuel pump switch "rolled into one" and the single wire connection is for the check gauges light.

DISCLAIMER: This is on my '91 and may not apply to any other year.
Reply



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:20 AM.

story-0
Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

Slideshow: How to Protect A Convertible Top: 10 DOs & DON'Ts

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-03 00:00:00


VIEW MORE
story-1
Top 10 Most Explosive Corvettes Ever Made: Power-to-Weight Ratio Ranked!

Slideshow: The 10 most explosive Corvettes ever built based on power-to-weight ratio.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-20 07:23:03


VIEW MORE
story-2
150 hp to 1,250 hp: Every Corvette Generation Compared by the Specs That Matter

Slideshow: From C1 to C8 we compare every Corvette generation by the numbers.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-12 16:54:12


VIEW MORE
story-3
8 Coolest Corvette Pace Cars (and Replicas) of All Time

Slideshow: Some Corvette pace cars became collectible legends, while others perfectly captured the look and attitude of their era.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-11 09:50:51


VIEW MORE
story-4
Top 10 Corvette Engines RANKED by Peak Torque (70+ Years of Muscle!)

Slideshow: Ranking the top 10 Corvette engines by torque output.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-05 11:58:09


VIEW MORE
story-5
Corvette ZR1X Will Be Pacing the Indy 500, And Could Probably Race, Too!

Slideshow: A Corvette pace car nearly matching IndyCar speeds sounds exaggerated, until you look at the numbers.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-04 20:03:36


VIEW MORE
story-6
Top 10 Corvettes Coming to Mecum Indy 2026!

Among a rather large group of them.

By Brett Foote | 2026-05-04 13:56:44


VIEW MORE
story-7
Top 10 C9 Corvette MUST-HAVES to Fix These C8 Generation Flaws!

Slideshow: the top 10 things Corvette owners want in the C9 Corvette

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-30 12:41:15


VIEW MORE
story-8
10 Revolutionary 'Corvette Firsts' Most People Don't Know

Slideshow: 10 Important Corvette 'firsts' that every fan should know.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-04-29 17:02:16


VIEW MORE
story-9
5 Reasons to Upgrade to an LS6-Powered Corvette; 5 Reasons to Stay LT2

Slideshow: Should you buy a 2020-2026 Corvette or wait for 2027?

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-22 10:08:58


VIEW MORE