by Matt Cramer » Wed Mar 07, 2012 7:18 am
I've got a Dodge Dart, and there's a reason I advised Mopar owners not to try splitting the signal with the stock gauges. I'm not sure if MGs are the same way, but here's what I've seen on Mopars. A lot of thermal gauges have very low resistance and are current based. If that's the case, it is pretty much impossible to share the sensor. So you'd need to measure the resistance of the gauge and make sure it's in the same ballpark as the sensor's resistance. If you come up with something like 5 ohms, forget using this gauge. Not going to get a voltage range you can work with.
Next problem - which Mopars don't have; they run 5 volt gauges - is that you are running your gauge at a nominal 10 volts. You'd need a buffer and a voltage divider to bring it down to the 5 volt range.
Final issue is the pulse width modulated voltage "regulation." The Mopar regulators pulse on and off at around 1 hertz. So you'd need a huge low pass filter to get the ripple out of the signal. Luckily coolant temperature doesn't change that much.