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Testing Fuel Sending Unit

28K views 8 replies 8 participants last post by  HKalin 
#1 ·
Can I test the sending unit with it out of my gas tank?

I tried grounding it and both setting it in water as well as moving the float manually with a "0" reading at all time.

Any input?
 
#2 ·
Yes. You can use an ohmmeter to check the resistance as you move the float arm. It should change as you move it. I checked my '68 shop manual & a "haynes" manual but unfortunatly could not find a resistance spec - sorry. Perhaps someone hear knows the specs or has a known good one "out" they could check?
 
#3 ·
Here are Two different published articals on testing the fuel gauge.

Fuel Gauge Problem Diagnosis
This process can be applied to all recent GM cars except those with computerized gauges.

1) Locate the fuel sender feed wire near the fuel tank. You're looking for a single tan colored wire. With the tan wire disconnected at the fuel tank, the fuel gauge should read past full with the ignition on. Wait a few moments as some fuel gauges take a long time to respond. Touch the tan wire from the body to any convenient ground and the gauge should read empty. If not, you have a wiring problem or a bad gauge.

2) If the gauge responds correctly, the gauge and wiring are OK. Next use a multi-meter to measure resistance to ground of the sender wire connection on the top of the fuel sender or the tan wire from the top of the fuel tank. Measurements should track the fuel in tank.

Full - 84-88 ohms
Half - 40 ohms, give or take
Empty - 0-2 ohms

If this doesn't check, then sender or wiring on top of the tank is bad or the sender not adequately grounded. Senders are typically grounded by a black wire which is welded to the sender and attached to the body with a sheet metal screw.

3) If the sender checks OK but gauge and wiring don't, clean the connections, reconnect the sender wiring and separate the Fisher connector (located just outboard of the fuse block under the dash). The gauge should then read past full. Ground the tan wire in the dash side of the Fisher connector and the gauge should read empty. If not, you probably have a bad gauge or possibly a dash wiring problem. Go to Step 5.

4) If the gauge checks OK, then make the same resistance checks to the tan wire in the body side of the Fisher connector. If the readings are different than those at the sender, body wiring has a problem and requires detailed inspection. If they look OK, then the Fisher connector is probably dirty.

5) Clean and reconnect Fisher connector, pull the connector off the back of the gauge and make the same resistance checks to the tan wire. If they don't check, you have a dash wiring problem. If they check OK, your gauge is bad. Gauges can be bench-checked but this is best left to a specialist.


Number Two.

1) If you don't already have, and know how to use, an ohm meter, buy one! Have somebody show you how to use it, even if it's some silly computer nerd that doesn't know anything about cars. You need to know this stuff!

2) Buy the factory wiring diagram for your car! If you are "on the cheap", you can get just the wiring diagram and not the full factory manual. If you are really cheap, you may be able to find it at the local library (you may have to ask if there is a certain branch that carries a large automotive section).

3) You have to use a GM gauge or after market gauge that is built to match the GM sending unit! If you go out to buy a new gauge and it doesn't say that it's for GM (or also lists Ford), it will not work!

4) GM fuel gauges work by knowing that the sending unit will provide a resistance (ohms) of zero when empty and 90 when full. That's the reason that you can't use a Ford gauge (Ford sells a fantastic looking gauge set for street rods but the fuel gauge would be worthless with your GM sending unit!).

5) As stated above, the sending unit should show a resistance of zero to 90 ohms. The way that a sending unit works is that there is a coil that has a sweeping contact. That coil can get shorts or can totally break. Shorts can cause the sending unit to cause "jumps" as you go from full to empty or even limit the total range.

6) The sending unit has to have a good ground connection. At the sending unit, you should see a small wire that is connected to the frame. It has to be there and the connection can not be corroded!

7) The wire that goes between the sending unit and the gauge has several connections within the loom. Any one of these connections being corroded will lead to problems. (I know that there is a poor connection somewhere in my 64 wagon. I just haven't had the time to locate it)

8) The gauge needs a 12 volt supply when the ignition is turned on. (If you have other gauges that share this supply, do they also act wrong?) The gauge also needs a good ground reference! (does the gauge work differently when the dash lights are on? they may share the same ground reference.)

9) Here are the steps that I'd recommend if your gauge isn't working;

a) Start with the gas tank as empty as possible.

b) Under the car, remove the wire at the sending unit and use your ohm meter to read the output of the sending unit. Have the reference connection of the ohm meter connected to the frame! It should read near zero ohms. Write down the reading! The reason that you remove the wire is so that you are not reading through the gauge! (also, you should be careful how you hold the leads of the ohm meter so that you are not reading through your own body)

c) Also while under the car, you should check that the body of the sending unit has a good ground connection!

c) Reconnect the wire at the sending unit and then get under the dash. Disconnect the wire that goes to the gauge and then use the ohm meter to read the wire. (disconnected for the same reason as before) The value you read should be close to the reading that you wrote down in step "b". It will be a slightly higher value due to the resistance of the wire and connections.

d) Reconnect the wire and go fill the tank.

e) Now do the same thing that you did in step "b". This time the ohm reading should be around 90 ohms. Write down the reading.

f) Do the same thing as in step "c". The value should be close to the same one you wrote down in step "e".

g) If everything checks out so far, you have narrowed it down to the gauge or it's 12 volt and ground reference.

h) If you think that it may be a ground problem, you could take a wire, attach it to a good ground and then touch the wire to the body of the gauge. (Don't touch anything but the gauge body!) While you are doing this, have a friend watch the gauge to see if it comes to life. Some gauges (like Autometer) have a terminal that needs a ground connection and grounding the body doesn't effect the gauge function!

i) If you think it's a 12 volt problem, you will have to use the ohm meter (on the voltage setting) to check if 12 volts is present at the gauge.

That should cover it!


Rocky
 
#4 ·
Right on. Thanks for the articles rocks66ss! I had read the one in the archives already but it left some questions unanswered. Unfortunately I pulled my hamstring last night so I don't know when I'll be able to get back under the car!
 
#5 ·
I'm installing a Dakota Digital gauge cluster, and the installation manual for the cluster indicates that there are three different GM sending units that may be encountered:

GM 30 -- 0 ohms empty and 30 ohms full
GM 90 -- 0 ohms empty and 90 ohms full
GM 250 -- 40 ohms empty and 249 ohms full

Can anyone tell me which one I will most likely encounter in my 70 El Camino?
 
#7 ·
i put a cheep gauge on the sending unit while out of th etank on a bench. the meter moved while i moved the float lever but then went back to the 90 ohm when the lever came to rest. what does this mean?
are these rebuildable? i took the cap off and the contact looks good on the sprung contact and the coils look shinny too. ??????
 
#8 ·
I know this thread is almost 11 years old, but it just helped me solve my gas gauge problem. Bottom line... the sending unit wire came off the tank, but the testing procedure described was easy enough for an electrical dummy like me to understand.

Thank you Rocks66ss...... don-t.....
 
#9 ·
Before I put the old sender that looked like it was brand new in my new tank I tested it by hooking up the boot connector to it and grounding the ground wire. I put the float at three different positions full, half way and empty. The gauge responded accordingly.
 
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