I recently had the gas tank of my WC-27 (’41 Ambulance) reconditioned. While I was at it, I purchased a new sending unit. The one on the tank had apparently disintegrated decades earlier.
A previous owner had converted the electrical system to 12V and replaced the fuel gauge with one rated for 12V. But now when I connect them, the indicator on the gauge reads from “full” to “very full.” So I have is a sending unit and a gauge that are incompatible without some tweaking.
From information I gathered on the Internet machine, it appears that I need to add some resistors somewhere in the circuit, but when it comes to electrical issues, I am a complete moron.
I need help determining what resistors to put in the circuit and where to put them. Any advice will be welcome so I can go from “Well I think I have enough gas to make it, and if not I’ve got a can of gas in the back” to “Look! The gas gauge shows half.”
Here are the specifics:
Fuel gauge resistance range is listed as 240 to 33.5 Ohms
Sending unit resistance range is measured at 130 (Empty) to 0 (Full) Ohms
Thanks,
Terry
A previous owner had converted the electrical system to 12V and replaced the fuel gauge with one rated for 12V. But now when I connect them, the indicator on the gauge reads from “full” to “very full.” So I have is a sending unit and a gauge that are incompatible without some tweaking.
From information I gathered on the Internet machine, it appears that I need to add some resistors somewhere in the circuit, but when it comes to electrical issues, I am a complete moron.
I need help determining what resistors to put in the circuit and where to put them. Any advice will be welcome so I can go from “Well I think I have enough gas to make it, and if not I’ve got a can of gas in the back” to “Look! The gas gauge shows half.”
Here are the specifics:
Fuel gauge resistance range is listed as 240 to 33.5 Ohms
Sending unit resistance range is measured at 130 (Empty) to 0 (Full) Ohms
Thanks,
Terry
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