nevadabandit Posted December 19, 2023 Report Posted December 19, 2023 Our tach is toast, the little nylon gear is stripped and its a 1966 issue tach that was put in at the factory. What are your suggestions for a replacement? Quote
ZuluZulu Posted December 19, 2023 Report Posted December 19, 2023 https://iflyei.com/product/r-1-rpm-tachometer-instrument/ Quote
PT20J Posted December 20, 2023 Report Posted December 20, 2023 Another option: https://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/inpages/mech_tachs.php?clickkey=19141 1 Quote
Fly Boomer Posted December 20, 2023 Report Posted December 20, 2023 2 hours ago, nevadabandit said: Our tach is toast, the little nylon gear is stripped and its a 1966 issue tach that was put in at the factory. What are your suggestions for a replacement? I kind of like the EI tach, but the type suggested by PT20J would probably be much easier to install. 1 Quote
Jrags Posted December 20, 2023 Report Posted December 20, 2023 (edited) I shipped my DG to Berkshire Instruments in Cape Coral Florida. It was $465 and I shipped on a Thursday and had it back on the following Tuesday. He will do a dual tach for $620 Edited December 20, 2023 by Jrags left out info Quote
cliffy Posted December 23, 2023 Report Posted December 23, 2023 If you go digital tach be aware that you may need to get used to a wandering RPM number in the window, Even a few RPMs varies the reading on some of them A standard cable driven tach in reality is much easier to use and doesn't cause the "learning curve" of watching the numbers wander around a little Now my change to the old Horizon digital did the RPM dance but I don't know if the EI one does or not. Changed to a Dynon HDX and now just set it a forget it. Getting yours fixed is not a bad idea Less labor to remove and install Less cost and it does what is needed quite efficiently 1 Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted December 23, 2023 Report Posted December 23, 2023 I have one of these: https://umainstruments.com/aviation-instruments/non-tso-engine-instruments/electronic-tachometers/ I’m very happy with it. It acts and looks like a mechanical tach, but it is electronic. It uses the same technology as most tachs in cars these days. Mine has worked flawlessly for the last 15 years. All you have to do is hook a power wire to it. If you use the pickup that attaches in place of the tach cable, it is an easy install. What I did was unsolder the wires from the connector. Then the cable will fit through the grommet the tach cable went through, then solder the connector back on inside the engine compartment. They are the same connector used on CB radio microphones, so if you mess it up, they are cheap and easy to come by. They are also easy to solder on. The only downside is the hour meter is kind of hard to read, but you only need to do that when you do maintenance. Another benefit is the cost, just a little more than a new mechanical tach. When you order it, they will mark the dial for your airplane with the correct red green and yellow bands. They will also preset the hour meter to your current aircraft hours, so you will have an accurate display of TTAF. 1 1 Quote
TheAv8r Posted December 27, 2023 Report Posted December 27, 2023 @nevadabandit I have an M20E tach from my 1965 M20E I removed when I put a JPI 930 in. It was working fine when removed, we didn't have any issues with it. I'll cut you a deal on it if you'd like to snag it. 1 Quote
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.