1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 18, 2010 Report Posted September 18, 2010 Trying to confirm fuel sender for my car. 1950 Dodge Special Deluxe (Cdn. version of Plymouth Special Deluxe) 6 volt positive ground. Parts manual lists it as 1240864. It is a single terminal sender. I will attach pictures. Is number P232 from Roberts the correct replacement? It is listed as for 49 - 57 cars. Andy Bernbaum's P-193 is listed as for 49 - 55 Dodges. Gauge seems to work, slams to full when I ground the wire. I could not get any resistance when I had the sender removed and was moving the float so I presume the sender is faulty. Quote
P-12 Tommy Posted September 18, 2010 Report Posted September 18, 2010 When you had the sender out, did you ground it? Tom Quote
55 Fargo Posted September 18, 2010 Report Posted September 18, 2010 Trying to confirm fuel sender for my car.1950 Dodge Special Deluxe (Cdn. version of Plymouth Special Deluxe) 6 volt positive ground. Parts manual lists it as 1240864. It is a single terminal sender. I will attach pictures. Is number P232 from Roberts the correct replacement? It is listed as for 49 - 57 cars. Andy Bernbaum's P-193 is listed as for 49 - 55 Dodges. Gauge seems to work, slams to full when I ground the wire. I could not get any resistance when I had the sender removed and was moving the float so I presume the sender is faulty. Can you use a universal single terminal fuel sender unit, very inexpensive. As long as it has the correct ohm range. 1 wire fuel senders are much easier to deal with and to locate, you may not have to pay the extra money froma place like Roberts or Bernbaums, when a universal 1 wire sender may work........Fred ps yes your's is a 1 wire sender, as they were after 1949 Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 18, 2010 Author Report Posted September 18, 2010 I used my meter and went from the terminal and used various spots on the shell itself. I made sure I had a good connection and then moved the float up and down and no reading. When you had the sender out, did you ground it?Tom Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 19, 2010 Author Report Posted September 19, 2010 I had bought an universal sender and that was my initial idea. But, the mounting flange on the universal one was a 5 hole pattern and on the original it is held in by the locking plate. I thought about trying to retro the 2 into making 1, but figured I would end up with nothing and possibly bugger up my tank in the process. Can you use a universal single terminal fuel sender unit, very inexpensive.As long as it has the correct ohm range. 1 wire fuel senders are much easier to deal with and to locate, you may not have to pay the extra money froma place like Roberts or Bernbaums, when a universal 1 wire sender may work........Fred ps yes your's is a 1 wire sender, as they were after 1949 Quote
55 Fargo Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 I had bought an universal sender and that was my initial idea. But, the mounting flange on the universal one was a 5 hole pattern and on the original it is held in by the locking plate. I thought about trying to retro the 2 into making 1, but figured I would end up with nothing and possibly bugger up my tank in the process. Interesting, as the 46-48 Mopar tanks were a 5 hole pattern sender, guess Mopar was trying progress for 49. Too bad cuz JC Whitney has 1 wire senders for Mopars, witha Ohm resistance range of 78-10 ohms........Fred Quote
TodFitch Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 I had bought an universal sender and that was my initial idea. But, the mounting flange on the universal one was a 5 hole pattern and on the original it is held in by the locking plate. I thought about trying to retro the 2 into making 1, but figured I would end up with nothing and possibly bugger up my tank in the process. See: http://www.ply33.com/Repair/fuelsender.html Quote
P-12 Tommy Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 1 meter lead to the terminal screw, 1 meter lead to the body of the sender:) Move the arm, watch the meter.There is nothing to ground.I thought if you check it with 6 volts from the battery, you have to ground it to make it work.Tom Quote
aero3113 Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 Here is what I did with a single wire unit from JC Whitney. Quote
55 Fargo Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 Keith, that looks slick,you used the cap from your oem sender correct? Is this sender from JC Whitney, the Mopar Universal type, they are only $22.99, a lot better than the $85.00 I paid fro my 2 wire deal from Roberts.... Quote
aero3113 Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 Thanks Fred, I got the idea from this site http://www.ply33.com/Repair/fuelsender.html but attached the top plate a little different. Works great . Quote
P-12 Tommy Posted September 19, 2010 Report Posted September 19, 2010 I believe he was doing a ohms reading of the single wire sending unit by moving the float arm after it was removed from the tank:)That makes perfect sense.Tom Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 19, 2010 Author Report Posted September 19, 2010 Picked up a sender from my friend's donor car today. It does not function either, but it is a good candidate for adding a new universal sender to it. I can get a universal 1 wire sender with the appropriate ohm ratings for just over $20. Will try to do this week and post pictures and updates. Thanks to everyone for the info. Quote
BobT-47P15 Posted September 20, 2010 Report Posted September 20, 2010 It just makes me wonder......every time I see one of these one wire senders with an exposed wire end which will be residing inside a gas tank. It seems like it would be dangerous due to a possible spark, but I guess it isn't. Quote
TodFitch Posted September 20, 2010 Report Posted September 20, 2010 It just makes me wonder......every time I see one of these one wiresenders with an exposed wire end which will be residing inside a gas tank. It seems like it would be dangerous due to a possible spark, but I guess it isn't. The current and voltage is quite low so a spark is unlikely even given a poor design. On the units I've looked at the sweep arm contact touches more than one fixed contact at a time (make before break) so there should be no possibility of a spark at all. And even if there is, you need the correct fuel/air mixture for an explosion and, with the possible exception of an empty tank, the mixture in the tank is too rich. Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 20, 2010 Author Report Posted September 20, 2010 Thanks Tod You answered my question before I could ask it. Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 23, 2010 Author Report Posted September 23, 2010 I could not source a universal sender with the proper ohms ratings locally. Found a 30 - 240 ohm sender and proceeded to alter it to fit. Then I added a couple of 220 ohm resistors in parallel across the single terminal and a ground terminal that I added. This brought it down to about 77 ohms when empty, I adjusted the float arm (not shown in my pictures) so that it travels further up when full to lessen the resistance to about 40 ohms when full. Right now from looking in the sender hole of the tank it looks about just over 1/2 and that is what the gauge reads. I am more concerned about the bottom half of the tank as opposed to the top half, Thanks Quote
TodFitch Posted September 24, 2010 Report Posted September 24, 2010 I could not source a universal sender with the proper ohms ratings locally. Found a 30 - 240 ohm sender and proceeded to alter it to fit. Then I added a couple of 220 ohm resistors in parallel across the single terminal and a ground terminal that I added. This brought it down to about 77 ohms when empty, I adjusted the float arm (not shown in my pictures) so that it travels further up when full to lessen the resistance to about 40 ohms when full. Right now from looking in the sender hole of the tank it looks about just over 1/2 and that is what the gauge reads. I am more concerned about the bottom half of the tank as opposed to the top half,Thanks Looks like a cork float on that.... Is that the float that came with the universal sender? How will the shellac on that handle the ethanol in modern gas? Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 24, 2010 Author Report Posted September 24, 2010 I re-used the float off of the old donor sender. There is a plastic one with the universal. Should I change to the plastic one? Quote
Don Coatney Posted September 24, 2010 Report Posted September 24, 2010 Tod; Once again (as expected) you made me search shellac origins. Below is a link to part of my findings but also the most interesting of my findings. http://antiquerestorers.com/Articles/jeff/shellac.htm I did not know shellac was an insect product until I read this. Quote
TodFitch Posted September 24, 2010 Report Posted September 24, 2010 Tod;Once again (as expected) you made me search shellac origins. Below is a link to part of my findings but also the most interesting of my findings. http://antiquerestorers.com/Articles/jeff/shellac.htm I did not know shellac was an insect product until I read this. Thanks for the search. It looks like shellac dissolves in all types of alcohol. And while that is good if you want a liquid to apply to a surface, it is not good for the long term: Once the dry flakes are dissolved in ethanol, a chemical process known as esterification begins. What happens is that the alcohol starts to chemically modify the hard shellac resins and ultimately turns them into a sticky gum which doesn't dry. Sounds like something that I would not want in a gas tank that will be filled with a liquid containing even a little ethanol. Quote
1950 Special Deluxe Posted September 24, 2010 Author Report Posted September 24, 2010 Tomorrow after work, I will remove the sender and put the plastic float on. I am in this deep, I might as well complete the task. Thanks for the help. Quote
Chachos 49 Posted May 5, 2020 Report Posted May 5, 2020 This is my sending unit from gas tank. It’s a ‘49 Plymouth. It’s set up for 1wire. Does tank ground itself and wire goes to ignition? Quote
Sniper Posted May 5, 2020 Report Posted May 5, 2020 The tank grounds itself and the wire goes to the fuel gauge 1 Quote
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