Read here
HowStuffWorks "How Fuel Gauges Work"
there are some variations but generally you had it right in the first instance
Well this looked as good a place to post this as any other. There don`t seem to be a white man`s magic section. There is a electronic section, but this is a way, waaaay more basic question of electricity and gauges. As it is now the fuel gauge is wired power to the gauge then down to the sender in the tank and finally to earth. Is this correct? Or does the power go to the sender then back to the gauge and then to earth?
Cheers Hall
Read here
HowStuffWorks "How Fuel Gauges Work"
there are some variations but generally you had it right in the first instance
It depends on which Landrover you are talking about.
Your description is correct for Series up to 1967. For the rest of Series production, it also applies with the complication of power coming from a voltage stabiliser that has three terminals - voltage in, voltage out, and earth. 90/110/Defender (and, I suspect, RR + Disco) have the same general description except that the voltage regulator is incorporated in the gauge, so that this is a three terminal device - voltage in, sender, and earth. A further complication is that most (all?) senders in diesels have a warning light switch incorporated.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
Hmmmm o kLet`s see. It has a classic range rover instrument binnacle muonted in the dash and a classic ranger rover tank and sender. So would it have the voltage regulator built in? It is or was a petrol tank and now a diesel tank, so won`t be any diesel warning lights.
Cheers
I think it will be built in, but this may depend on its vintage, and I am not knowledgeable on details of Range Rovers.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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