Re: Matching fuel guage to sender
Hi Keith.
I see. Any chance you can take a measurement of the resistance of your actual SW gauge?
I can't see that adding a resistor in series would do the job, because if you placed a 100 ohm resistor in there to bring the 'empty' resistance up from the Sierra's current value of 140ish ohms to the 240 ohms required by your gauge, that would have the effect of bringing the 'full' value up from 22 ohms to 122 ohms. This is half the empty value, so the gauge would only read up to 1/2 full max.
So, I'm wondering about using a series resistor along with one placed in parallel with the gauge. I'll need the existing gauge resistance (which should be constant) to arrive at values - if I manage at all...
I'm a tad concerned about messing with parallel resistors, tho', as this could cause a greater current to flow through the sender. I wonder what the chances are of making the sender warm up - gulp!
(Surely there is some protection there however - I mean, if the wires to the gauge became shorted together, this would cause max current through the sender, and it must be designed to cope with this without going 'boom'?!)
Hi Keith.
I see. Any chance you can take a measurement of the resistance of your actual SW gauge?
I can't see that adding a resistor in series would do the job, because if you placed a 100 ohm resistor in there to bring the 'empty' resistance up from the Sierra's current value of 140ish ohms to the 240 ohms required by your gauge, that would have the effect of bringing the 'full' value up from 22 ohms to 122 ohms. This is half the empty value, so the gauge would only read up to 1/2 full max.
So, I'm wondering about using a series resistor along with one placed in parallel with the gauge. I'll need the existing gauge resistance (which should be constant) to arrive at values - if I manage at all...
I'm a tad concerned about messing with parallel resistors, tho', as this could cause a greater current to flow through the sender. I wonder what the chances are of making the sender warm up - gulp!
(Surely there is some protection there however - I mean, if the wires to the gauge became shorted together, this would cause max current through the sender, and it must be designed to cope with this without going 'boom'?!)
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