I would just use the sender you removed. The gauge was working correct?
Just buy the hose adapter that has a ground lug... and run a ground wire to it... install the old sender... extend the temp sender wire to the new location... done.
Just remember that it will be lower hose and reading the coolant temp after being cooled opposed to the hot water being pumped to the radiator.
Yes Sir, the gauge was working just fine thanks to
@Shran who completely hooked me up with a new gauge cluster after I broke the needle on my tach...!
Sooooo...this was interesting. Yesterday morning I noticed my coolant level (cold) was VERY high. I have a brand new tank/reservoir and since it doesn't have a high/low or hot/cold hash mark, I just put in a cold fill level arbitrarily, about halfway up it. I got out my handy garage use only turkey baster and removed the excess coolant until it was back to the cold fill line.
I had recently futzed with the lower radiator hose and lost some coolant, which I had replaced with fresh coolant, prior to that with the TWO previous radiators and innumerable flushes I did the cold fill line was consistent. I'm literally on my third radiator now, which is now an OEM-style replacement, so it's hard to keep up, even for me!
Anyway I can home from a test drive/"stress test" on the fans and the whole time I'm noticing the car is running significantly cooler than the previous day. I purposely left the A/C off at first, which was brutal because it was 110+ yesterday because I didn't want the e-fans running. It took quite some time for it to get hot enough to trip the e-fans, which immediately dropped the temp. Running up and down the interstate and throwing in a 1.5K+ of elevation up and down both ways with the A/C on and off it never exceeded 214 on the steepest grade and again stabilized to a steady 206...
The other day as soon I was off the interstate the temp began to climb, eventually reaching 214 or so before my idle test. That didn't happen yesterday. While the A/C unfortunately became less effective at stop and go, low speed driving the temp gauge didn't move and stayed right around 206.
So I returned to my house for the "idle test". I left the A/C off and let it idle for 5 minutes, and it would not go above 214. I turned the A/C on and it briefly went to 215 and stayed at 213/214 for 5 minutes. Unfortunately the A/C was putting out near heater-like air at that point, but that's a 12-degree drop under identical conditions.
I thought I had burped and eliminated any air pockets in the cooling system but with all of my futzing around that probably wasn't the case, and running hot goes hand in hand with elevated coolant temperatures in my experience so maybe I'm good to go now as far as that's concerned...?
The picture shows the coolant level AFTER my test drive. There was a small amount of coolant that leaked through the top so my cold fill hash mark might be a little too high I think....?
With the new temp gauge fitting I'll be futzing around with it AGAIN but I thought it was really curious.
The A/C has me a lil agitated. The e-fans are directly on top of the condenser so there's plenty of air moving through it in addition to the factory fan pulling air, so I'm not sure why it's only working well at interstate speed, especially if there's no corresponding increase in coolant temperature.
My A/C guy is gonna check, I think I'm low on refrigerant honestly, but I'll let him pressure test it and figure it out. It more important that the engine run cool than the A/C work but I can't have my family/dog uncomfortable during peak summer temps so I need to get that handled. The ENTIRE A/C system is brand new so there's no acceptable excuse that it's not working properly...