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  #1  
Old 06-22-2010, 05:56 AM
NoBones NoBones is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Area 442 Somewhere in Florida
Posts: 3,699
Default Re: Gas Gauge

Quote:
No, when key is turned off, needle returns to E but whenever on, it reads full even when no where near it.
With that being the case, check the pink wire (should be
pink if wired correctly) It maybe shorted to ground somewhere around the tank or at the gauge it self.

See ya, Ken
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  #2  
Old 06-22-2010, 09:35 AM
Islandtrader Islandtrader is offline
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Tarpon Capital Of The World
Posts: 2,122
Default Re: Gas Gauge

Try this:


1) Turn the key switch on, so the gauge has power.
2) Disconnect the pink wire from the back of the gauge. What does the gauge read now? If it goes from full to empty, and your fuel tank's not full, the pink sender wire is grounded out somewhere between the dash and the fuel tank sender - it may have rubbed though on a sharp edge somewhere - you'll need to try and follow the wire back to the sender.

3) Take a jumper wire (short piece of wire w/stripped ends) and jump between the pink terminal and the ground terminal (black wire). Did you gauge go to full? If so, that verifies that your gauge is working properly. If it didn't you either don't have a good ground connection to the back of the gauge (use a testlight or multimeter to verify) or your gauge needs to be replaced.

4) Get access to the sender. You should see a pink wire (the same one that's connected to the back of your gauge) connected to the center portion of the sender, and a black wire (ground) connected to the outside / screw holding the sensor in the tank.

If troubleshooting on the gauge side of things didn't answer your questions, do this:

5) With the key switch still on, disconnect the sender wire. Did you gauge drop down to empty? If so, things are working properly. If it didn't do anything, as mentioned in 2, the pink wire is shorted to ground and you'll need to trace or replace the pink wire. You can also perform a continuity check on the pink wire between the sender and gauge location.

6) Disconnect the ground wire from the sender and touch it to the pink wire on the sender. Did your fuel gauge go to full? If so, things are functioning properly. If not, the ground to the sender is bad (check with a test light or multimeter), or your pink wire has a complete break in it somewhere.

A couple shortcuts / thoughts here:

1) If you gauge reads full all the time, the pink wire is contacting ground somewhere, or your sender is so sticky it's not allowing the float to drop down when the fuel level goes down. Check the wiring side first.

2) If you gauge read empty all the time there's a break in the pink wire somewhere or the sender's stuck in the down position.

If everything checks out above, it's likely your sender.

(this came from another post)
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  #3  
Old 06-23-2010, 03:35 AM
eggsuckindog eggsuckindog is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Tampa
Posts: 2,354
Default Re: Gas Gauge

that is a bad ground - I have learned way too much about gas gauges recently
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