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  • Voltage stabilizer

    For my Marina based roadster with Smith gauges, (speedo, tacho, oil pressure, water temp, volt, amp and fuel meter is it necessary to use a voltage stabilizer?
    The Marina wiring diagram shows one, but what is the function of it?
    When it is necessary, where can I buy one?
    Had it to be an universal one or specially BL part?


    Kindly regards,
    Frans Swaans

  • #2
    Re: Voltage stabilizer

    Stabiliser is usually mounted on the back of the smiths speedo. It provides a stable voltage to the Fuel sender and the temperature gauge only and will give more stable readings.
    It can be replaced with ebay Item number: 280333716101 but occasionally the correct item will turn up but many from other vehicles will do the job.

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    • #3
      Re: Voltage stabilizer

      triumph dolomite had one mounted to bulk head easy to get dont forget to earth the body though or it wont work

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      • #4
        Re: Voltage stabilizer

        I swapped from Marina instruments to a set from an MG - the Marina has a voltage regulator in the instruments itself. To buy a separate "original" regulator costs £20-25 and they won't be that good as they are mechanical. Instead if you can solder take a trip to maplins and get a LM317 solid state regulator and a couple of resistors and build your own - http://home.comcast.net/~whaussmann/InstrStabilizer/Instr_Stabilizer.htm is a good example - I just built mine into a cheap plastic case again from maplins and mounted in the dash.
        Attached Files

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        • #5
          Re: Voltage stabilizer

          Amgas,
          is 10V output the correct output?

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          • #6
            Re: Voltage stabilizer

            I believe 10v is correct for MGB instruments, so I guess most smiths type instrumnets will be the same - I think it is lower because of the design of the mechanical regulator - There is a great reference about this in a book called "MGB Electrical Systems" - if you go to books.google.co.uk and search for "MGB Electrical Systems instrument voltage regulator" then you can read the pages relating to the iustrument voltage regulator. This is actually a really good book and although it is written with an MGB bias I suspect a lot of it carries over to most british classic cars.

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            • #7
              Re: Voltage stabilizer

              The Smiths type are nominally 7.2V but they actually switch the 12V on and off to give a squarewave averageing 7.2V

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              • #8
                Re: Voltage stabilizer

                I built a voltage regulator using solid state regulator, soldered to a small pcb with Lucar connectors soldered on. I didn’t put in a box but used an aluminium bracket as a heat sink and mounted it on the back of the speedo as per the original. The total cost was less than 50p.

                I am using Smiths instruments (ex Spitfire) and 10 volts. All the gauges work just as they did with the original regulator. (With the usual caveat about the petrol gauge)

                I can find no references to Smiths instruments working at 7.2v and plenty of references to them working at 10V.

                Don

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                • #9
                  Re: Voltage stabilizer

                  Good info here: http://www.minimaniauk.co.uk/web/DisplayID/2142/SCatagory/ELECTRICAL/DisplayType/Technical%20Information/ArticleV.cfm

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