Hi Dick, You (probably) need what I am going to do in a day or two here, send your fuel sender in for a 'rebuild', they always go bad in older cars when the resistance element starts to detiorate from condensation and wear. I have addresses of a couple places that do it for $85-115, 2days to 2 weeks+ turn around time, I think it is www.autoinstruments.com may be the $115. one? Check in hemmings motor news, www.hemmings.com And you usually just use a big punch and a hammer (or a screwdriver and a hammer!), the hard part is keeping the o-ring stuck in the right place . . . Before you take it out, just check the gauge circuit by grounding the (brown?) wire to the sender. have fun! Bob Moore '58 Dodge Sierra KD500-1 On Sat, 19 Mar 2005 08:09 , Dick Skinner <dickskinner.ma@xxxxxxxxxxx> sent: >I have a leak at the junction of the gas float mechanism and the gas >tank in my 1959 Plymouth station wagon. It could be a bad gasket or >just not tight enough. Does anyone know where I can get, or borrow a >wrench to tighten or remove the nut holding the mechanism in place? > Also, due to an incredible lapse of thinking, I did not check the >operation of the float mechanism prior to reinstalling the gas tank - of >course the gas gauge does not work. And, by troubleshooting all parts >of the system, the problem is in the sending unit. Could be the ground, >although I have attempted to be sure via a separate ground wire, that >the sending unit is grounded. Any thoughts? > >Dick Skinner, Mendon Mass >1959 Plymouth Sport Suburban >1953 Maxim Pumper Fire Truck > >************************************************************* > >To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to >http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa\?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1 > ---- Msg sent via CWNet - http://www.cwnet.com/ ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1
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