Post
by White Exec » Wed May 27, 2015 9:31 pm
The first (Smiths) tacho instrument I laid hands on (about 1965) was one of those IGN fed units. The feed to the coil from the CB was taken via the meter, in the shape of a couple of turns of the feed cable round an inductive clip on the back of the instrument.
I think it was a fairly basic unit, probably consisting of a simple "charge pump", where the incoming current pulses were short-term stored in a capacitor, which was in turn shunted by a discharge resistor. As the pulses grew in frequency (engine speed), so the voltage on the capacitor increased. The needle display, in glorious Smiths red, white, black and chrome, was a simple voltmeter.
Later on, this kind of charge pump design was superseded by F to V converters, the basis, as said, of both modern tachos and speedos.
Not sure about the parentage of Jaeger and Smiths. Several of the XM dash instruments and modules are Jaeger (France). I think the two companies' instruments were built to ape each other, enabling mix-and-match on the same dash.
The old classic round, white-on-black instrumentation, with white, red or orange pointers, takes some beating for appearance and readability, and ran right across vehicles of quality - Rover, Rolls, Jag, Daimler, Bristol, Van den Plas, MG... Still can't get excited about the cream and oval offerings of some recent cars.
Last edited by
White Exec on Thu May 28, 2015 10:36 am, edited 1 time in total.
Chris
1996 XM 2.5TD Exclusive RP7165 Polar White
1992 BX19D Millesime RP5800 Sable
1989 BX19RD Delage Red Deceased; 1998 ZX 1.9D Avantage auto Triton Green Company car 1998..2001; 2001 Xantia 1.8i auto Wicked Red Company car 2001..2003