My '77 spider has a gas gauge issue. When it's full it seems to work fine, but once it gets close to the 1/2 mark it starts to bounce back and forth and eventually just goes to E and stays there. I'm thinking the problem is the sending unit. Do you agree?
Thanks.
Gas Gauge
Re: Gas Gauge
the sending unit has a series of very fine wires that tend to wear out, especially at about half tank. Seems that most people keep that level of fuel and the float arm isn't dampened, so it bounces as the fuel sloshes and eventually wears the wires out
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Re: Gas Gauge
The float arm isn't dampened How does it stay dry in all that wet gas???
Ron
Ron
Re: Gas Gauge
I think you've been too close to exploding cherry bombs and are suffering from exposure to black powder
Re: Gas Gauge
Cool, thanks Mark. So do I have to pull the fuel tank to get the sending unit out?
-Doug
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Re: Gas Gauge
I'm having the same issue, or close to it, just add in the fact that (by chance you may not have noticed it) at night that the gas gauge back light will go out and kick back on during your "back and forth" stage...?
But in my case this could just be because my cars wiring makes spaghetti look logical
hope I'm helping the discussion more then hurting getting your problem being solved....
But in my case this could just be because my cars wiring makes spaghetti look logical
hope I'm helping the discussion more then hurting getting your problem being solved....
Re: Gas Gauge
Actually, none of my instrument lights is currently working. That's a future project!Lex wrote:I'm having the same issue, or close to it, just add in the fact that (by chance you may not have noticed it) at night that the gas gauge back light will go out and kick back on during your "back and forth" stage...?
But in my case this could just be because my cars wiring makes spaghetti look logical
hope I'm helping the discussion more then hurting getting your problem being solved....
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Re: Gas Gauge
Doug,
I recently repaired a wonky fuel sender. The low fuel light would come on but the gauge wouldn't work unless the tank was about half full. I thought it was a goner, but decided to take a look to see if I could figure out what went wrong with it. Now that I did, I wish I hadn't replaced the sender in one of my other cars without taking it apart first.
I started by bead-blasting the scale off of the metal tubing so I could see if there were any splits or holes. That cleaned the whole works up nicely -- looks like a new one.
Then I used an ohm meter to determine if the wires or the rheostat were OK or not. Both had continuity, but the slider for the fuel gauge part wasn't making good contact. After a little massaging of the contact, the whole sender seems to be working properly.
I realize soaking in gasoline might not make the last step meaningful, but I spayed the contact areas with some electronic contact cleaner.
It was pretty easy to get the thing apart and back together, so I'd recommend trying it. You're going to have to take it out to replace it anyway. After that it doesn't take long to figure out if it's salvageable.
Ernie
I recently repaired a wonky fuel sender. The low fuel light would come on but the gauge wouldn't work unless the tank was about half full. I thought it was a goner, but decided to take a look to see if I could figure out what went wrong with it. Now that I did, I wish I hadn't replaced the sender in one of my other cars without taking it apart first.
I started by bead-blasting the scale off of the metal tubing so I could see if there were any splits or holes. That cleaned the whole works up nicely -- looks like a new one.
Then I used an ohm meter to determine if the wires or the rheostat were OK or not. Both had continuity, but the slider for the fuel gauge part wasn't making good contact. After a little massaging of the contact, the whole sender seems to be working properly.
I realize soaking in gasoline might not make the last step meaningful, but I spayed the contact areas with some electronic contact cleaner.
It was pretty easy to get the thing apart and back together, so I'd recommend trying it. You're going to have to take it out to replace it anyway. After that it doesn't take long to figure out if it's salvageable.
Ernie