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Let's try a different approach...Go to Radio Shack and purchase a 100-ohm, 1/2-watt resistor (they cost about $1.50 for 5). Unplug the wire from the sender and insert the resistor between the wire and a good ground. Switch the ignition ON and the gauge should register exactly half-way between cold and hot. Drive it around with the resistor installed and the gauge should remain stable at mid-scale. If it does, replace the sender. If it doesn't, you either have intermittent connections or a bad gauge.
...so product number 53-819 on the second to last row. would be the correct sending unit?
Quote from: bd on January 31, 2013, 09:35:36 pmLet's try a different approach...Go to Radio Shack and purchase a 100-ohm, 1/2-watt resistor (they cost about $1.50 for 5). Unplug the wire from the sender and insert the resistor between the wire and a good ground. Switch the ignition ON and the gauge should register exactly half-way between cold and hot. Drive it around with the resistor installed and the gauge should remain stable at mid-scale. If it does, replace the sender. If it doesn't, you either have intermittent connections or a bad gauge.Apologies for not contributing to the thread, but I'd like to ask how you know to do something like this. It's absolutely brilliant!