Jump to content

FUEL GAUGE NEEDED


jframe

Recommended Posts

Finally put the 65 in a shop that works on a lot of older vehicles, and let them check my fuel gauge issue. They are CONVINCED it is the gauge. I took them a used gauge I had, and was told it wasn't any better than the one in the car. Does anybody out there have a KNOWN GOOD fuel gauge for a 65 Riviera they would part with? They pulled the gas tank and cluster, and checked everything in between. They said the printed circuit, wiring, and new sending unit I put in were all good, with the sender reading 86 ohms at the full mark and .3 at empty. So I need to get a WORKING fuel gauge, if anyone has one, please let me know.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

          The fuel gauge in my Dad's 65 Riviera went bad in 1968 and we had to replace it. There was an nos one on ebay  for a reasonable price about a year ago, and I pointed this out and a couple of people  on the forum said  no need to buy it, that used ones are plentiful. I guess now we will see if that is the case. I should have

bought it myself because I knew that they go bad because my Dad's did. Now I wish I had so I could sell it to you. They only wanted 80.00 for it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Seafoam65 said:

          The fuel gauge in my Dad's 65 Riviera went bad in 1968 and we had to replace it. There was an nos one on ebay  for a reasonable price about a year ago, and I pointed this out and a couple of people  on the forum said  no need to buy it, that used ones are plentiful. I guess now we will see if that is the case. I should have

bought it myself because I knew that they go bad because my Dad's did. Now I wish I had so I could sell it to you. They only wanted 80.00 for it.

I know, I saw it too. These guys ohm'd everything right up to the cluster and said wiring, print circuit, sender, everything did good but the gauge. An NOS one sure would be nice. They put in the used one I had in a box, and it does somewhat better, but didn't go past 3/4 full when I filled up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I literally threw my old one out 3 weeks ago ,,, going through all my left over parts ,,, for some reason it had the most noxious smell you could ever imagine coming from it ,,, don’t know what chemical or compound that was from in it but it was stinking up the whole box of parts ,,, not that that helps you ,,, gotta be one floating around ??

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, pyntre said:

And that’s not what I would call an easy part to swap out ...yikes !!!  

It's no problem. Take an Allen wrench to the set screw in the chrome bezel in the cluster. Pop it off along with the black shield containing the warning light screens, and it's 3 screws to get the gauge out. Easy peasy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, pyntre said:

Well that works !!! ?? that’s probably the easiest thing to do on the whole car ,,,, darn it’s a complicated beast sometimes !!!!

It sure is. Been chasing this problem since I bought it 2 years ago.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I do not believe so. GM cars used 0-30 ohms from the 1930s until about 1964(?), and then switched to 0-90 ohms, which they kept until 1996 or so. 0 ohms is empty. The design is ridiculous, because any stray resistance will cause the gauge never to get to empty, likely leaving the owner stranded.

 

0.3 for empty is perfect. It is hard to get  a sending unit to go that low, even though it needs to. 86 is still 4.3 ohms short of full. That doesn't sound like enough to cause you to top out at 3/4, but maybe. If you have an electronic supply locally, I would grab some resistors that add up to exactly 90 ohms, substitute them for the sending unit, and see what happens.

 

It is a "balanced coil" type gauge, and you can read about that online. Most pages are about British cars. Resistances will be different, but the principle will be the same. You may be able to figure out how to calibrate the gauge that gets to 3/4, (assuming it still only went to 3/4 with 90 ohms connected).

 

Edit: disconnecting the wire should cause the gauge to peg full. Does it? I don't remember. If it wont go high with the wire disconnected, disregard that last paragraph.

 

Edited by Bloo (see edit history)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am still thinking it's a gauge issue, because the original reads at a different point when full vs this used gauge that is in it now. Plus, the gauge in it now swept from near empty over to the 3/4 mark when I filled it in a big hurry vs the original taking FOREVER.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That may be, but at 0.3 ohms he has less shellac than most of us at the low end, At the high end, the shellac would help. I'm not really disagreeing with you though, I also suspect the sending unit.

 

90 ohms worth of resistors would put it to bed in a hurry. That should make it read "full". If not, its the gauge.

 

Maybe the float arm is bent a little. Typically a GM gauge has little room for error. If the float touches the bottom, it never gets to zero. 0.3 ohms is about the best zero I have ever seen. Maybe the float is hitting the top of the tank before it gets to 90 ohms?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

As a long overdue update, I pulled the tank and sender again, and actually bent the arm of the sending unit just slightly, and now it goes much closer to "F" when it is filled up.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...