It has never read "full" since I finished the restoration a 1 1/2 years ago. All new wiring, tank, and sender in tank. Original gauge.
I ground the sender wire to the frame: gauge goes to full
I hook the float/sender up to the wire, ground the assembly and push the float all of the way up: gauge goes to full.
I put the float in the tank, hook up the sender wire, fill it up: only shows half full
After a few gallons burned the gauge just sits on empty and I get play the "when will it be empty" game.
I've pulled it apart more than four times, tested as described above, even tried a new float assembly; nothing. I'm damn tired of smelling like gas and looking for thoughts on this. The only thing I can think of that might be screwing me is the tanks' ground to the body. I painted the tank prior to install, so I'm not sure if it's getting a good ground, or how I'm going to clean the mounting surface off now lol! If I ohm it out with my multimeter, how much resistance is too much, causing a faulty reading at the gauge?
I ground the sender wire to the frame: gauge goes to full
I hook the float/sender up to the wire, ground the assembly and push the float all of the way up: gauge goes to full.
I put the float in the tank, hook up the sender wire, fill it up: only shows half full
After a few gallons burned the gauge just sits on empty and I get play the "when will it be empty" game.
I've pulled it apart more than four times, tested as described above, even tried a new float assembly; nothing. I'm damn tired of smelling like gas and looking for thoughts on this. The only thing I can think of that might be screwing me is the tanks' ground to the body. I painted the tank prior to install, so I'm not sure if it's getting a good ground, or how I'm going to clean the mounting surface off now lol! If I ohm it out with my multimeter, how much resistance is too much, causing a faulty reading at the gauge?
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