CORPCRIM Posted August 13, 2008 Share Posted August 13, 2008 Here is my dilemma. I re-wired my 12/1970 using the EZ-Wiring kit but I didn't hook up the tach because every wiring diagram I've seen talks about a green wire on the back of the tach. There is no green wire on my tach. Only a black wire, a yellow/red wire, and a white loop with black and red markings. Can someone help me figure out how to wire this up? Does the Black wire go to a ground and the yellow/red wire go to the coil? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Six_Shooter Posted August 14, 2008 Share Posted August 14, 2008 The yellow/red is ignition, as in 12V switched ignition. The black is ground. The loop is a current sensing circuit, that will need to be ran as a loop from the dizzy through this loop and back to the coil IIRC. Mine used to be like that, until I put a points type tach in. If I recall the EZ wire kits, they assume a points trigger to the tach, and would likely be easiest to replace your existing tach with one from a 260 or 280Z. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Geking Posted August 19, 2008 Share Posted August 19, 2008 yep. Six is right. I would just do a gut swap with a 280z tach. Its not too hard if you just take it slow. The foam pads at the back may have stuck a bit to the metal casing when you attempt to remove the guts. I had to do this for my 73, as they are not easy to find. (73 uses a 240z case with the 260 and 280z style pickup. The pickup is a single wire coming from the - side of the coil. If your tach jumps all over the place and will not go above 3k, add in a resistor inline. (I have forgotten the exact rateing, somewhere like 4K I think, only 1/4 watt should be fine) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Six_Shooter Posted August 20, 2008 Share Posted August 20, 2008 yep. Six is right. I would just do a gut swap with a 280z tach. Its not too hard if you just take it slow. The foam pads at the back may have stuck a bit to the metal casing when you attempt to remove the guts. I had to do this for my 73, as they are not easy to find. (73 uses a 240z case with the 260 and 280z style pickup. The pickup is a single wire coming from the - side of the coil. If your tach jumps all over the place and will not go above 3k, add in a resistor inline. (I have forgotten the exact rateing, somewhere like 4K I think, only 1/4 watt should be fine) My '73, had a current sensing tach just like above. There seems to be conflicting information on this, but it seems that most '73s had current sensing tachs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wheelman Posted August 20, 2008 Share Posted August 20, 2008 My 73 also had the current sensing tach. Wheelman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.