>So I thought my problem was fixed. I drove to school today and stopped >the car. The needle sat exactly on the normal temperature line. But when >I came back to the car after class, I found the needle had migrated up to >around 11:55. I was worried, but when I started the car, it popped down >to cold like it should, so again I thought the problem was fixed, albeit >with more trepidation this time. > > Can you pull the fuse it is on completely and leave it out and see if it migrates to the 11:55? My reason of thought is that although you have the diode in place, there may be other leakage. I'd see if completely removing the new display from the electrics keeps it from happening. It is possible that the guage is screwed up now, but i'd much rather completely eliminate something instead of assuming the diode is working properly or completely stopping reverse current. Samuel Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ADVERTISEMENT <http://rd.yahoo.com/M=267637.4116719.5338353.1261774/D=egroupweb/S=170512 6215:HM/A=1754451/R=0/SIG=11tpj98m3/*http://www.netflix.com/Default?mqso=6 0178323&partid=4116719> click here <http://us.adserver.yahoo.com/l?M=267637.4116719.5338353.1261774/D=egroupm ail/S=:HM/A=1754451/rand=478458928> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: DMCForum-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .
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