Allen:
You may have a bad connection inside the gauge itself. A contact
slides across a resistor and if it gets rusty, it could be jumpy.
Once you've eliminated everything else, you can drive out the rivets
and take it apart and clean it, but this is a little tricky and you
could ruin your gauge. Old gas gauges are notorious for going bad
though and you'll likely have to replace it in the future anyway. If
the connection is bad, it should read Full I think.
Joe
Joe Clark
'50 3100 Deluxe
Knoxville, Tennessee
oletrucks is devoted to Chevy and GM trucks built between 1941 and 1959
|