I’m troubleshooting a SCAD TM2 external capacitance sensor on the holding tank of my 1993 Hunter Legend 35.5 and would appreciate any ideas from those with experience.
The original aluminum holding tank was replaced sometime ago, probanly around 2003 with an unknown plastic tank. It measures approximately 24” × 24” × 12” tall (30 gallons).
The SCAD foil strips were installed exactly per the instructions:
Has anyone seen this with a replacement plastic holding tank? Could the tank construction (internal baffle, thickened wall, molded rib, double-wall, etc.) prevent the sensor from seeing the liquid even though the sensor itself appears to function normally? Any other ideas?
The original aluminum holding tank was replaced sometime ago, probanly around 2003 with an unknown plastic tank. It measures approximately 24” × 24” × 12” tall (30 gallons).
The SCAD foil strips were installed exactly per the instructions:
- 11” long with correct 1.5” spacing and 1/2” margins at top and bottom of 12” tall tank.
- Smooth, flat installation with good adhesion
- New, properly functioning TM2 monitor (I replaced the original after discovering it had a T2 channel issue, and verified it is correctly displaying voltage receibed from the holding tank sensor)
- Tank nearly empty: ~1.0 V (SCAD diagnostic)
- Tank nearly full: ~1.0 V
- Shorting the foil strips together: ~4.0 V
- Pressing a silicone bag full of water against the outside of the strips: ~2.2 V
- Swapping signal wires between T1 and T2 on the new TM2 gives identical readings, so the monitor channels appear to be working correctly.
- SCAD told me they typically expect about 0.2 V empty and 1.5 V full, and that jumping the sensors should produce a 4v signal from the sensor (it did)
Has anyone seen this with a replacement plastic holding tank? Could the tank construction (internal baffle, thickened wall, molded rib, double-wall, etc.) prevent the sensor from seeing the liquid even though the sensor itself appears to function normally? Any other ideas?