My sender works but is a bit off, says I am slightly above "R" when I am empty. Is there any way to adjust these? My sense is no but just asking. I am going to ask an EE buddy about this also.
I don't think the gauge is adjustable, it is possible to change the resistance curve I suppose. Seems more likely the sender isn't sized for the tank.My sender works but is a bit off, says I am slightly above "R" when I am empty. Is there any way to adjust these? My sense is no but just asking. I am going to ask an EE buddy about this also.
Are you sure about that?I think there is little you can do, as the resistance of the detection system is giving less ohms when the tank drains.
Don would say that plan is irresistible...I have a bunch of 2 ohm resistors and I plan on hooking up an extra sender I have and getting current on full and empty and then with 2ohm increased resistance. This will give us a hint as to how this is setup. So sad, today's cars would have 4-5K electrical damage doing something like this.
Maybe I confused the issue. The basic requirement for such an instrument may be relaxed from being linear to being "continuous and monotonic". That is, as the input changes the output should never jump nor reverse direction. I believe many fuel gauges are deliberately non-linear, where the needle moves little when the tank is on the half full range, and is very granular and fast as the tank empties.I think when we get down to the end of /beginning of the curve, even if it is not a 45 degree line, at the location I would be dealing with which is a short segment, one can assume linear. As I tell my kids " this isn't the space shuttle" meaning we don't have to go to 5 decimal points.