Wiring to voltmeter
I don't know the wiring of your truck well enough to give you a really good answer. Does your truck have 2 heavy leads connected to the back of the ammeter, one heavy lead to each screw terminal? If so you can attach both of those heavy leads to a single terminal on your new voltmeter, and connect the other terminal of the voltmeter to a good ground. This may sound strange (like are we creating a short circuit and putting everything at risk of melt down?). Just remember that a voltmeter is internally a very high resistance (1,000s of Ohms) so it limits the amps flowing through the ground wire to a few 1/1,000s of an amp.
The ammeter is an extremely low resistance device, it is made to be a "super conductor" possibly capable of conducting 100 amps. So if one side of an ammeter was connected to ground, the wire and insulation will burn almost immediately. As we are changing from ammeter to voltmeter in the dashboard instrument panel, we MUST be sure to understand the differences between the 2 different meters.
As to your specific question of where to hook up the voltmeter, it just becomes a matter of convenience, and yes I agree that it should be on a switched circuit, otherwise it will be a constant low level drain on the battery. Where behind that instrument panel can you find a key switched wire that will be "hot" any time the truck is running? The OEM's use of so many plastic shielded connectors makes that difficult, so use your DVM or DMM (volt scale!) to find the easiest place to hook on to for the + side of the voltmeter. The - terminal on the voltmeter needs to be wired to a ground, and you will probably find many groundings on the sheetmetal braces under the dashboard.
I hope this has helped.
Paul in MN
Originally posted by n1265
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The ammeter is an extremely low resistance device, it is made to be a "super conductor" possibly capable of conducting 100 amps. So if one side of an ammeter was connected to ground, the wire and insulation will burn almost immediately. As we are changing from ammeter to voltmeter in the dashboard instrument panel, we MUST be sure to understand the differences between the 2 different meters.
As to your specific question of where to hook up the voltmeter, it just becomes a matter of convenience, and yes I agree that it should be on a switched circuit, otherwise it will be a constant low level drain on the battery. Where behind that instrument panel can you find a key switched wire that will be "hot" any time the truck is running? The OEM's use of so many plastic shielded connectors makes that difficult, so use your DVM or DMM (volt scale!) to find the easiest place to hook on to for the + side of the voltmeter. The - terminal on the voltmeter needs to be wired to a ground, and you will probably find many groundings on the sheetmetal braces under the dashboard.
I hope this has helped.
Paul in MN
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