75gmck25
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2016
- Posts
- 2,251
- Reaction score
- 2,188
- Location
- Northern Virginia
- First Name
- Bruce
- Truck Year
- 1975
- Truck Model
- K25 Camper Special TH350 NP203
- Engine Size
- 5.7
I bought the 3 port tank sending units for my ‘75 GMC K25 from Autozone, and they work fine. Make sure the sending unit ground wire is securely screwed to the frame rail and the sending unit wire is connected.
fYI - My fuel pump also has three ports because it has a fuel return line to the tank.
Crawl under the truck and see what type of solenoid you have to connect the tanks. Mine used a 6 port solenoid (switches fuel feed and fuel return) and I have a 3 port tank sending unit ( fuel feed, fuel return, vent), but some use a 2 port sending unit and a 3 port solenoid that switches only the fuel feed.
A ‘76 should have the old type solenoid that only has one electrical terminal. With no power applied it will default to the passenger side, main tank. With 12 volts power applied it will switch to the driver’s side auxiliary tank. The solenoid grounds by being bolted to the frame.
I will see if I can find the write-up I did once before on how the dash switch is wired. It is much more complicated than you would expect, and the wires take a very inefficient path.
fYI - My fuel pump also has three ports because it has a fuel return line to the tank.
Crawl under the truck and see what type of solenoid you have to connect the tanks. Mine used a 6 port solenoid (switches fuel feed and fuel return) and I have a 3 port tank sending unit ( fuel feed, fuel return, vent), but some use a 2 port sending unit and a 3 port solenoid that switches only the fuel feed.
A ‘76 should have the old type solenoid that only has one electrical terminal. With no power applied it will default to the passenger side, main tank. With 12 volts power applied it will switch to the driver’s side auxiliary tank. The solenoid grounds by being bolted to the frame.
I will see if I can find the write-up I did once before on how the dash switch is wired. It is much more complicated than you would expect, and the wires take a very inefficient path.
If neither unit is working, I would suggest looking at the gauge and wiring before you just replace both sending units. The dual tank switching wiring for the gauge is a bit convoluted and has quite a bit of areas where you could be having a poor connection that could cause it to not read right.