| Mel,
You forget to mention the 10V voltage stabilizer. The gauge works on 
10V. This stabilizer is a small metal box of about 1"x2" fitted 
somewhere behind the dashboard, often on one of the big gauges. These 
are mechanical devices that stabilise the voltage for two instruments 
more or less on a constant 10V. They can go wrong. There are modern 
solid state replacements that are more reliable and accurate.
If the gauge moves when you apply a powersource of say 9V, the gauge is 
usually OK. If thevariable resistance of the sender is between 20 and, I 
think, 280Ohms it is OK. Of course the float should be leek free and the 
mechanism should operate smoothly.
Kees Oudesluijs
NL
edic schreef:
> Does anyone have a good site to go to that discusses troubleshooting gas
> gauges?
>
> I need to figure out if my gauge is bad or if my new sending unit is bad, or
> maybe something else.
>
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Mel Brunet
>
> HBJ8L/39749
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