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How to select fuel sending unit?
- CptBacardi
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How to select fuel sending unit?
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
Before replacing anything, check your connections at the tank and harness plugs, and at the gauge. Also ensure the tank actually has continuity to ground.
Depending on the shape of the tank, I usually try to keep the bottom of the sender about 3 inches off the bottom. This will give you some reserve fuel when the gauge reads empty. You should never let it get that low but good to have in case the situation creeps up on you. Of course it all depends on how low your fuel pickup in the tank is.
As far as the sender type, it's personal prefference really. You can go with higher tech stuff but the mechanical swing/float type have been around for a long time and do last for years. If that's what you have and it's original, then it's lasted 30 years, nothing wrong with that!
- g36
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
Crusader xli
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- mbjezior
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
I replaced my fuel senders with the new WEMA sliders- tank is 22” deep- ordered 21” deep senders...Ohm 30-240...original fuel gauges are VDO...which I believe are at a different Ohm range...because I measured and calculated the exact amount of fuel in the tanks and the gauges aren’t close....ordering two new gauges that fall withing the Ohm range...will let you know..
- pepmyster
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
- 390Express
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
Also, if I ground the water temp gauge it pings full hot, does the same ring true for the fuel level sending unit? Trying to determine if it is the sending unit or the gauge, but I'm guessing it's the sending unit. I was going to add 20-40 gallons before I do anything. It only has about 40 gallons of gas in a 210 gallon tank right now. I figured I'd take it out with 60-80 gallons in it, and let it slosh around a bit before I change it.
- g36
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
Crusader xli
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- Midnightsun
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
VDO gauges work from 10-180 ohms. I would start by unscrewing the contacts at the sensor, clean/sand them and see what happens. Usually it is as simple as this. It will read empty when grounded or close to it.
VDO temp gauges when grounded work opposite of what you are experiencing with your temp gauge (323-099 ohms) and when grounded it should top out.
- 390Express
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
Midnightsun wrote:Source of the post What exactly is your gas gauge doing?
VDO gauges work from 10-180 ohms. I would start by unscrewing the contacts at the sensor, clean/sand them and see what happens. Usually it is as simple as this. It will read empty when grounded or close to it.
VDO temp gauges when grounded work opposite of what you are experiencing with your temp gauge (323-099 ohms) and when grounded it should top out.
Damn, I was hoping I could get it to move by grounding it, just to get the needle bouncing. Gauge reads dead empty, doesn't jiggle one bit when the key is one, or motor is running.
- Midnightsun
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Re: How to select fuel sending unit?
390Express wrote:Source of the postMidnightsun wrote:Source of the post What exactly is your gas gauge doing?
VDO gauges work from 10-180 ohms. I would start by unscrewing the contacts at the sensor, clean/sand them and see what happens. Usually it is as simple as this. It will read empty when grounded or close to it.
VDO temp gauges when grounded work opposite of what you are experiencing with your temp gauge (323-099 ohms) and when grounded it should top out.
Damn, I was hoping I could get it to move by grounding it, just to get the needle bouncing. Gauge reads dead empty, doesn't jiggle one bit when the key is one, or motor is running.
Clean the contacts at the sender, may very well fix the problem.
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