my oil pressure when hot at 2000 rpm indicates about 18 psig on the fairing gauge.
with a mechanical gauge it indicates 32 psig at 2000 rpm.
my dealer has replaced the gauge, sending unit, and bypassed the wiring.
they think it is the heat of the engine affecting the resistance of the sending unit.
does anybody else have a similar problem?
I still question if that mechanical gauge mentioned was accurate and was used under the exact same conditions, or was it installed and the engine just run for a short period that didn't get everything as hot as when you were riding? I think I suggested this once before, but the best way to take all the variables out of the mix is to use a T fitting to connect the sending unit and a verified accurate mechanical gauge to the same source at the same time. Run the engine until it's hot enough to show the low pressure on the fairing gauge, and immediately compare with the mechanical gauge. This takes all the who-shot-john out of the situation (assuming the mechanical gauge is calibrated and accurate).
Since there is no widespread known problem with sending units, if the dealer really thinks this is a sending unit problem he should have changed it a second time. Even better, remove the sender from one of their bikes that doesn't exhibit the same problem. Once again, substituting a
known good part takes all the guessing out of the situation. Right now they have just changed a bunch of parts and still have no clue. This is unfortunately typical of the modern "tech", just replace parts until something hopefully fixes the problem. However, when they've replaced all the obvious parts and still haven't impacted the problem, this modern method falls on it's butt.
Jerry