When VP changed from the D2-40A to the D2-40B the main change was the
introduction of the MDI (mechanical
diesel interface) system. This system allows a mechanical
engine to interface with the same canbus gauge instrumentation system as used in the larger electronic engines in the VP line, even though the D2-40
engine itself is not electronic.
What this means is that the "temp sender" which is already installed in your engine is not a normal temp
alarm switch which opens and closes, but is a thermistor which sends varying resistance values to the MDI box depending on the engine temp. When the MDI circuit sees a resistance value that corresponds to "over heat" it sounds an audible
alarm and lights the high temp light in the alarm instrument or illuminates the alarm in the tach window.
If you want to install a temp gauge, all you have to do is source the proper gauge, (metric or US), and hook it up to the daisy chain harness which is already connected to the tachometer. The temp information is already flowing on the canbus, and the gauge will display it.
If you want to get a bit fancier, you could buy an
NMEA 2000 gateway and connect the engine data into your vessel
NMEA 2000 bus and display all the engine data on your compatible chart plotter.
Have fun.
DougR