Re: Fuel Gauge Behavior
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Home away from home
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The sender has two little leaf springs in it. One of them can fall off and perhaps short it internally. Either way it seems like it must be shorted somehow….
Posted on: Today 3:18
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1955 400 | Registry | Project Blog
1955 Clipper Deluxe | Registry | Project Blog 1955 Clipper Super Panama | Registry Email (Parts/service inquiries only, please. Post all questions on the forum.) service@ultramatic.info |
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Re: Fuel Gauge Behavior
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Home away from home
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Hey PGH - just making sure, did you mean the gauge has those leaf springs?
Posted on: Today 9:02
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Joe B.
Greenville, NC 1950 Super Deluxe Eight Touring Sedan, Model 2302-5 327 w/ Ultramatic, 6v+ |
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Re: Fuel Gauge Behavior
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Forum Ambassador
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Since the gauge moves to full scale when powered and drops back when off it sounds as if the basic gauge internals may be OK. Since you worked with the terminals and cardboard insulators, if there are no wires connected to the sender side it also sounds like there may be a short to ground somewhere on the sender side terminal. Since nothing smoked with ign on the BAT side sounds OK. If there is a direct short, don't leave the gauge powered on for very long in this condition or the gauge could burn out.
48-56 gauges are all the thermal type which means a thin wire heater element is wrapped around a bimetal strip. Each side of the heater connects to a terminal. When the heater warms the bimetal strip, the strip bends and one end being fixed and the other attached via a pivot or linkage moves the needle. Here is a photo of a 56 gauge showing the typical thermal gauge internals. 22-23 series gauges will be very similar in construction but do use a different type sender controlling the heater so gauges operate slightly different electrically. ![]() In the second or angled photo of these external views of a 22-23 series gauge you can barely see under the cardboard to where the terminal passes thru the center of a larger hole in the metal case. The long heavy strip of cardboard holds the terminals and is also fastened to the case. Being very stiff, it keeps the terminal rigidly upright and positioned in the middle of the hole so nothing can touch the case. Is there any chance the cardboard was loosened and now something has moved or was damaged on the sender terminal side so the terminal is now able to touch the case? If that is OK is there a chance the terminal was twisted in any way so the wire connecting terminal to the heater element could have been pulled and shorted. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Posted on: Today 9:58
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Howard
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Re: Fuel Gauge Behavior
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Home away from home
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Quote:
No.
Posted on: Today 10:01
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1955 400 | Registry | Project Blog
1955 Clipper Deluxe | Registry | Project Blog 1955 Clipper Super Panama | Registry Email (Parts/service inquiries only, please. Post all questions on the forum.) service@ultramatic.info |
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