shortarms
Member
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2021
- Posts
- 36
- Reaction score
- 8
- Location
- Oklahoma
- First Name
- Rex
- Truck Year
- 1986
- Truck Model
- K10 Suburban
- Engine Size
- 350
A while ago I got some advice that my fuel gauge showing 1/4 tank when full was usually a bad gauge resistor on the back of the fuel gauge. I pulled the cluster out, intending to wire in an external 90ohm power resistor to resolve the issue. I found the nuts that hold the resistor on were loose. I pulled it all apart, cleaned and checked resistance and got 87 ohms. Close enough for the girls I chase. I reinstalled, tightened the nuts and checked resistance: 87 ohms across the posts. Reinstalled the cluster, hit the key and had an indicated full tank. I had just filled up so this was correct.
Now it gets screwy. I made it down the road about 1/2 mile and it dropped to 1/4 tank. Flipped back and forth. Settled back to full. This was last week. Now, it's pretty much back to 1/4 tank, but occasionally will flutter to full (or actual level) and then drop back down.
Loose connection from wiring to gauge circuit? I cleaned both sides with a pencil eraser and rubbing alcohol. It seems tight and straight. Bad gauge circuit? Anyone seen this before?
Now it gets screwy. I made it down the road about 1/2 mile and it dropped to 1/4 tank. Flipped back and forth. Settled back to full. This was last week. Now, it's pretty much back to 1/4 tank, but occasionally will flutter to full (or actual level) and then drop back down.
Loose connection from wiring to gauge circuit? I cleaned both sides with a pencil eraser and rubbing alcohol. It seems tight and straight. Bad gauge circuit? Anyone seen this before?