Jeez, I forgot you don't feel good right now. I'm sorry - seriously.
But here's an easy way to work from the other end of the problem. It should only take about 5 minutes and will verify whether the senders are good or not:
Take your meter (the bed is currently off correct?). Set it to a low resistance scale (like 0 -100 would be perfect). Remove any external wiring to the brass pin and attach the probes as shown below. The ground lead can stay attached. Obtain a ohmic value across the sender - might as well do both tanks.
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I am assuming the tanks are 16 gallon capacity, but that doesn't matter anyway. All you want to see is whether the senders's variable resistance rises as a function of the level of gas in the tank. The exact numbers are not important.
After you get the initial resistance. Dump a 5 gallon Jerry can of gas in the tank and recheck the ohms across the senders coil.
I believe the upper limit for a GM gas tank is 90 ohms. So even if the tank was empty for first check (and rang out at 0 ohms), the addition of 5 gallons will raise the float to about 1/3 of full capacity. That level should yield a reading of about 30 ohms. If it moves to anywhere near that point you will know that it is varying the resistance and might just be stuck or something.
So yes beds off truck, and I did put 5 gallons in drivers tank and gas gauge stayed on Empty....that's when I knew something was up, I did ohm it before I left and it was only 4 ohms....that's if I set it on correct setting , "as I'm not good w electrical" but my buddy is gona help me re read senders when I'm home...thanks for info appreciate it.
I would do the second test with the ground side probe at the end of the lead where it bolts to the frame.