
 Originally Posted by 
captain_funbeard
					
				 
				 
First thing to check is the wire that runs from the fuel guage to the sender unit atop the tank, because it sounds like you have a short circuit. Make sure this wire is connected to the fuel sender unit ONLY and is not short circuiting back to the chassis (earth). It could be pinched somewhere out of sight under the bulkhead. Try disconnecting the original wire off both the sender unit and the gauge and run a temporary new wire to see if a proper reading is now made. If it seems to be working now, then replace this wire properly.
 
If it still reads FULL when a new wire is connected, then it'll have to be a process of elimination, seeing which parts in the chain are working properly, in order, to fully rule things out as you go.
 
So, start at the voltage regulator. Turn the engine on and check the voltage coming in is in the normal range, like around 14V. Read the output from the regulator for a constant 10V. Remove the wires from the regulator to the gauges and with the engine running, read the voltage from the regulator to earth (chassis or engine, etc). It should be an unwavering 10V, even with changes in engine revs. Old regulators wear out and stop delivering the steady, lowered voltage that the guages use as a reference point for a correct reading.
 
If you have a steady 10V, then reconnect gauges and move on. If not, replace. You can replace with an inexpensive modern solid state regulator for better performance and durability.
 
Next, check the guage itself.
Maybe try this (I think it would work), wire up from the 10V feed to the fuel gauge, then from the guage to a known working water temp sensor (it's a varible resistor like the fuel level sender). Earth the sensor back to the chassis and acquire some cold, warm and boiling hot water. You should be able to get stable, varied readings on the fuel guage as the tip of the sensor is placed into the different temperature waters.
 
Alternatively, you could wire up to the water temp sensor in your engine when the coolant is warm to at least see if the guage will give a different reading to the normal FULL it is displaying (disconnect the wire to the water temp gauge from the sensor first).
 
If, in all the different temps, the guage still reads FULL!! like it normally does, then it's faulty and will need replacing.
 
If the guage seems to be behaving correctly now and shows differing, but stable and consistent readings from the different temperatures the sensor is immersed in, then the problem is likely to be from the varible resistor in the fuel sender unit itself.
 
Replacing the sender unit should have the problem solved.
 
That's the best I can offer, I'm keen to hear how it goes.
Cheers, Nige 
			
		 
	
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