...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
IIRC that is exactly how mine is hooked up. Red to yellow and white to red.I checked mine by sticking a lighter up to the probe and watching the gauge.
"Do you really think an EGT gauge is going to have a reading for 32*F ;<)"YES, it should be within +/- 3 to 4 degrees."212* is also going to be right at the bottom of the scale, so it won't tell you much either. "It will tell you if it's going to be off at the higher temperatures"I don't think I would worry too much about checking the calibration of a new gauge. If I were concerned, I would call the manufacturer and as him how to check it."I called a manufacturer (Auber instruments) and they told me to use iceed water and boiling water."I would suspect that using a flame of a know temperature and heating the probe to equilibrium and seeing what the gauge reads is how they do it. "Calibrating at the higher temperatures can only make the calibration better but the equipment needed will be a lot more expensive than iced water and boiling water.
I was just meaning to see if the gauge was moving the correct way, not really calibrating it. I had mine hooked up wrong and the needle started to move below zero with the lighter. Quick switch of the wires and it is all good now.To see if it was reading somewhat accurately I used an infared gun and a torch. It wasn't a real accurate way as there would be heat loss in the open air and what not, but I got it to read within 25F of eachother. I figured it close enough.
This is an EGT gauge we are talking about. On my VDO the scale starts at 100*. You are going to have to heat it to at least 300* to get it to move.