108-30-2130-100 Gauge style (PSIg) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality PSIg sensors in 100, 150, 500, 1,000,
and 2,000. Gauge style pressure sensors reference pressure above atmospheric pressure. When exposed to atmospheric
pressure, gauge style pressure sensors will read 0 psig. Gauge style pressure sensors are commonly used for oil pressure,
fuel pressure, brake pressure, nitrous pressure etc.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2130-1000 Gauge style (PSIg) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality PSIg sensors in 100, 150, 500, 1,000,
and 2,000. Gauge style pressure sensors reference pressure above atmospheric pressure. When exposed to atmospheric
pressure, gauge style pressure sensors will read 0 psig. Gauge style pressure sensors are commonly used for oil pressure,
fuel pressure, brake pressure, nitrous pressure etc.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2056 The Universal 12 Position Trim Pot is for use on virtually any Engine Management System, such as the AEM EMS. Use the Trim
Pot to adjust a number of trims, including ignition timing, fuel, boost, etc. The Universal 12 Position Trim Pot includes:
12 Position Trim Pot with Flying Lead, 2 Brushed Silver Trim Position Decals with ranges from -5 to +6 and 0 to +11,
Blue/Red/Black AEM Logo Knob Decals & Blue/Red/Black Colored Knob Decals.
- Can be used with virtually any engine management system
- Includes a weatherproof-over-molded flying lead that has 12-inch insulated, color-coded wires, two brush silver Trim
Position decals, and black AEM logo adjustment knob
- Adjusts a number of trims, including ignition timing, fuel, boost, etc.
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108-30-2130-15 Absolute (PSIa) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality stainless steel PSIa sensors in 15 (1BAR),
30 (2BAR), 50 (3.5BAR), and 75 (5BAR). PSIa is referenced to absolute zero. Absolute zero is the pressure measurement
when all the pressure exerted by the atmosphere has been removed. The most common use for absolute pressure sensors
is reading manifold pressure. PSIa sensors are required if you wish to measure vacuum. A PSIa sensor will read about
14.7 PSI when the sensing element is exposed to atmospheric pressure at sea level however they can be recalibrated
to read zero at atmospheric and a negative number at values less than atmospheric pressure.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2130-150 Gauge style (PSIg) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality PSIg sensors in 100, 150, 500, 1,000,
and 2,000. Gauge style pressure sensors reference pressure above atmospheric pressure. When exposed to atmospheric
pressure, gauge style pressure sensors will read 0 psig. Gauge style pressure sensors are commonly used for oil pressure,
fuel pressure, brake pressure, nitrous pressure etc.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2130-2000 Gauge style (PSIg) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality PSIg sensors in 100, 150, 500, 1,000,
and 2,000. Gauge style pressure sensors reference pressure above atmospheric pressure. When exposed to atmospheric
pressure, gauge style pressure sensors will read 0 psig. Gauge style pressure sensors are commonly used for oil pressure,
fuel pressure, brake pressure, nitrous pressure etc.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2130-30 Absolute (PSIa) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality stainless steel PSIa sensors in 15 (1BAR),
30 (2BAR), 50 (3.5BAR), and 75 (5BAR). PSIa is referenced to absolute zero. Absolute zero is the pressure measurement
when all the pressure exerted by the atmosphere has been removed. The most common use for absolute pressure sensors
is reading manifold pressure. PSIa sensors are required if you wish to measure vacuum. A PSIa sensor will read about
14.7 PSI when the sensing element is exposed to atmospheric pressure at sea level however they can be recalibrated
to read zero at atmospheric and a negative number at values less than atmospheric pressure.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2063 AEM's wideband O2 UEGO AFR replacement sensor and stainless-steel, finned, stand-off bung kit includes only a replacement
Bosch 4.2 LSU Wideband UEGO sensor and stainless steel tall manifold bung. It is designed for installation and use
with the AEM 4-Channel Wideband UEGO Controller, and forced induction (turbo and supercharged) applications.
These sensors have a laser-etched, calibrated resistor in the sensor’s connector body. This resistor is specifically
created for the exact sensor that it is attached to. Modifying this will invalidate the sensor’s output. The wideband
sensor is laboratory-calibrated at the Bosch factory, accurate to 0.1 AFR and never requires free-air calibration
when used with an AEM wideband AFR controller.
- Accurate to 0.1 AFR
- Never requires free-air calibration when used with an AEM Controller and connector plug.
- Specifically designed for use with AEM Wideband UEGO controllers
- Includes sensor and weld-on stainless-steel tall manifold bung
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108-30-2130-50 Absolute (PSIa) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality stainless steel PSIa sensors in 15 (1BAR),
30 (2BAR), 50 (3.5BAR), and 75 (5BAR). PSIa is referenced to absolute zero. Absolute zero is the pressure measurement
when all the pressure exerted by the atmosphere has been removed. The most common use for absolute pressure sensors
is reading manifold pressure. PSIa sensors are required if you wish to measure vacuum. A PSIa sensor will read about
14.7 PSI when the sensing element is exposed to atmospheric pressure at sea level however they can be recalibrated
to read zero at atmospheric and a negative number at values less than atmospheric pressure.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2130-500 Gauge style (PSIg) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality PSIg sensors in 100, 150, 500, 1,000,
and 2,000. Gauge style pressure sensors reference pressure above atmospheric pressure. When exposed to atmospheric
pressure, gauge style pressure sensors will read 0 psig. Gauge style pressure sensors are commonly used for oil pressure,
fuel pressure, brake pressure, nitrous pressure etc.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2130-75 Absolute (PSIa) Pressure Sensors AEM offers high quality stainless steel PSIa sensors in 15 (1BAR),
30 (2BAR), 50 (3.5BAR), and 75 (5BAR). PSIa is referenced to absolute zero. Absolute zero is the pressure measurement
when all the pressure exerted by the atmosphere has been removed. The most common use for absolute pressure sensors
is reading manifold pressure. PSIa sensors are required if you wish to measure vacuum. A PSIa sensor will read about
14.7 PSI when the sensing element is exposed to atmospheric pressure at sea level however they can be recalibrated
to read zero at atmospheric and a negative number at values less than atmospheric pressure.
Which Pressure Sensor is right for you?
There are many different tools that can be used for measurement, but the degree of accuracy is dependent upon the tool.
For example, a ruler can measure distance with a good degree of accuracy, but for a more precise measurement a caliper
should be used. The difference between a brass pressure sensor and a stainless steel pressure sensor is similar if
we think about it in these terms:
Brass Pressure Sensor = Ruler Use a Brass Pressure Sensor where you need a good reference to what
pressure is being seen. Example: Brass Pressure Sensor used for a Boost Gauge – Reference/Information for knowing
manifold pressure, not for ECU calibration.
Stainless Pressure Sensor = Caliper Use a SS Pressure Sensor where you need exact details of the
pressure. Example: MAP Sensor information for the ECU – Calibration/crucial information for the ECU.
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108-30-2014 AEM's Air Inlet Temperature Sensor Kits (AIT) senses the air temperature on the inlet side of the engine.
- Weatherproof connector
- Includes mating connector & pins
- Senses the air temperature on the inlet side of the engine
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108-30-2010 AEM's Air Inlet Temperature Sensor Kits (AIT) senses the air temperature on the inlet side of the engine.
- Weatherproof connector
- Includes mating connector & pins
- Senses the air temperature on the inlet side of the engine
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108-30-2001 AEM's Bosch 4.2LSU Wideband UEGO O2 replacement sensor kit includes only the sensor (with attached cable and
male connector) and is intended to replace an existing mounted wideband sensor used with AEM wideband air/fuel UEGO
controllers.
These sensors have a laser-etched, calibrated resistor in the sensor’s connector body. This resistor is specifically
created for the exact sensor that it is attached to. Modifying this will invalidate the sensor’s output. The wideband
sensor is laboratory-calibrated at the Bosch factory, accurate to 0.1 AFR and never requires free-air calibration
when used with an AEM wideband AFR controller.
- Accurate to 0.1 AFR
- Never requires free-air calibration when used with an AEM Controller and connector plug.
- Specifically designed for use with AEM Wideband UEGO controllers
- Replacement sensor only
For Digital Wideband UEGO Controller Part Number 108-30-4110 please refer to the 108-30-2004 Bosch LSU 4.9 Replacement UEGO Sensor
PN 108-30-2004.
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108-30-2002 AEM's wideband UEGO air/fuel ratio sensor kit includes a Bosch 4.2 LSU Wideband UEGO sensor, connector plug, pins and plugs,
and mild steel O2 bung. This kit is designed to be an installation kit for a sensor used with an AEM wideband air/fuel
UEGO controller.
These sensors have a laser-etched, calibrated resistor in the sensor’s connector body. This resistor is specifically created
for the exact sensor that it is attached to. Modifying this will invalidate the sensor’s output. The wideband sensor
is laboratory-calibrated at the Bosch factory, accurate to 0.1 AFR and never requires free-air calibration when used
with an AEM wideband AFR controller.
- Accurate to 0.1 AFR
- Never requires free-air calibration when used with an AEM Controller and connector plug.
- Specifically designed for use with AEM Wideband UEGO controllers
- Includes sensor, weld-on bung, connector, wire seals and pins
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108-30-2004 AEM's Bosch 4.9LSU Wideband UEGO O2 replacement sensor kit includes only the sensor (with attached cable and
male connector) and is intended to replace an existing mounted wideband sensor used with AEM Digital Wideband UEGO
Air/Fuel Controller Part Number 108-30-4110.
These sensors have a laser-etched, calibrated resistor in the sensor’s connector body. This resistor is specifically
created for the exact sensor that it is attached to. Modifying this will invalidate the sensor’s output. The wideband
sensor is laboratory-calibrated at the Bosch factory, accurate to 0.1 AFR and never requires free-air calibration
when used with an AEM wideband AFR controller.
- Accurate to 0.1 AFR
- Never requires free-air calibration when used with an AEM Controller and connector plug.
- Specifically designed for use with AEM Wideband UEGO controller Part Number 108-30-4110
- Replacement sensor only
All other AEM Wideband Controllers please refer to the 108-30-2001 Bosch LSU 4.2 Replacement Sensor
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108-30-2214 AEM’s Plug & Play CAN bus Communication Harness (PN 108-30-2214) eliminates the need to manually wire a CD-7 Digital
Dash Display to a Holley EFI system! This harness is fully terminated and connects the CAN2 input on the CD-7 main
harness to the CAN output on a Holley EFI harness.
Because the Holley EFI system does not provide power from the CAN output, AEM recommends using its CD-7 Power Cable (PN
108-30-2218) to simplify power and ground connections. The CD-7 Power Cable connects to the AEMnet connector on the CD-7
wiring harness and includes a pigtail connection with power and ground leads that make it easy to wire the dash for
power when used with non-AEMnet equipped devices.
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108-30-2217 AEM’s CD-7 OBDII CAN Plug & Play Adapter Harness makes the CD-7/CD-7L the perfect racing display for track day enthusiasts
who want to be able to see engine and vehicle data but are still running a factory ECU. This is especially true when
the CD-7 or CD-7L (logging) Digital Dash and OBDII CAN PNP Adapter Harness is combined with the Vehicle Dynamics
Module to add GPS, 3-axis accelerometer and 3-axis gyroscope for track mapping and lap times, and critical vehicle
dynamics data including G-loads, roll, pitch and yaw. And for CD-7 owners with CAN OBD-II who are already using the
dash and receiving channels from a data logger or other CAN-enabled device, you can now add additional channels through
the OBD connection with no additional wiring!
With the release of CD-7 software version 1.01.0X, all CD-7 Digital Dash Displays have the ability to read CAN bus data
from the OBDII port of 2008-up vehicles with a simple firmware update to DashDesign software version 1.01.04b. To
help with the installation, AEM has also made it easy to connect to the OBDII port by creating an optional CD-7 OBDII
CAN Sub Harness (PN 108-30-2217) that provides plug & play access between the CD-7 harness and the vehicles OBDII
connector. AEM’s CD-7 Plug & Play Power Cable is included with the OBDII Plug & Play Adapter Harness to make
an easy power and ground connection for powering the dash.
Once the CD-7 OBD-II CAN Sub Harness is connected, the dash polls the vehicle’s CAN bus to see what channels are available
and what speed they are being delivered. Users can then select the channels they want to add to the display, set
alarms for available channels and log them if using a CD-7L logging dash.
Although the CD-7 cannot control the data rate that available channels are transmitted (since this is determined by the
vehicle manufacturer), users can prioritize channels to optimize them for the best available transfer speed
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108-30-2201 AEM offers two Fuel Ethanol Content (Flex Fuel) Sensor Kits, one with 3/8” barbed adapter fittings and one with -6AN
to 3/8” adapter fittings (PN 108-30-2200 barbed fittings, PN 108-30-2201 -6AN fittings).
AEM’s Flex Fuel Ethanol Content Sensor Kits measure a vehicle’s fuel ethanol content percentage and fuel temperature,
which allows users with programmable engine management systems (capable of tuning for flex fuel) the ability to optimize
an engine’s tuning calibration for fuel ethanol content. While many gas stations label flex fuel as E85 (85% Ethanol
and 15% Gasoline), actual ethanol content can be much different. Using AEM’s Flex Fuel Ethanol Content Sensor delivers
the ability to determine the amount of fuel blend being used at any given time.
This sensor is ideal for use with AEM’s Infinity standalone programmable ECU & Series 2 EMS on flex-fuel equipped
vehicles, or it can be connected to a dash display or data logger.
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108-30-2200 AEM offers two Fuel Ethanol Content (Flex Fuel) Sensor Kits, one with 3/8” barbed adapter fittings and one with -6AN
to 3/8” adapter fittings (PN 108-30-2200 barbed fittings, PN 108-30-2201 -6AN fittings).
AEM’s Flex Fuel Ethanol Content Sensor Kits measure a vehicle’s fuel ethanol content percentage and fuel temperature,
which allows users with programmable engine management systems (capable of tuning for flex fuel) the ability to optimize
an engine’s tuning calibration for fuel ethanol content. While many gas stations label flex fuel as E85 (85% Ethanol
and 15% Gasoline), actual ethanol content can be much different. Using AEM’s Flex Fuel Ethanol Content Sensor delivers
the ability to determine the amount of fuel blend being used at any given time.
This sensor is ideal for use with AEM’s Infinity standalone programmable ECU & Series 2 EMS on flex-fuel equipped
vehicles, or it can be connected to a dash display or data logger.
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