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Studebaker M15A-20 "Mr. Potato Head"

Friday, November 29, 2019

Fuel Gauge Modification

The M series fuel gauge functions by utilizing two bimetallic strips heated by Ni-chrome wire, one to push the needle up and one to push the needle down. The two strips are controlled by a center tapped resistor in the tank mounted fuel level sensor. The center tap position of this resistor is set by the float of the fuel level sensor. The two bimetallic strips Ni-chrome heating elements are temperature limited by a set of contacts. These contacts, over time pit and eventually stop functioning.

To eliminate this pitting, a modification can be accomplished to reduce the contact current from 600 ma to 600 ma. The solution is performed by adding a MOSFET transistors to carry the current. The procedure is as follows:

1. Break the heater connections
    a. Modify the contact stack
    b. Gold plate the contacts
2. Build and install circuit board
    a. Cut board and cut the traces
    b. Solder on MOSFETs and resistor
    c. Epoxy board to meter
3. Wire the circuit board
4. Test and adjust the meter


Reference pictures






Break heater connections

To make the break in the circuit between the contacts and the heating elements the following is done:


 Drill out the rivet holding the contact in place


Contact & heater assembly removed from gauge


Contact & heater assembly disassembled










Build and install circuit board




Wire circuit board


I decided to use Litz wire for connections "A" and "B" because it is a very flexible wire

Test the meter

Testing consists of hooking up the meter and sending unit on the bench with a 6 volt battery to power the meter/sender. The two meter arms are iteratively adjusted to get the meter needle to land on the full mark when the sending unit arm is in the full position and the empty mark with the arm in the empty position.

The big problem is to determine the sending unit's full and empty positions. My current plan is to attach a weight to the float so it drops to the bottom of the tank and measure the sender resistance. To measure full I can just fill the tank and measure the sender resistance. I then can adjust the sender's arm for each position to get the resistance for testing the meter.

When testing it is a good idea to connect a ammeter meter in series with the power to the meter. This is a good way to make sure everything is connected correctly and lets you a way to monitor the contact open/close activity. When everything is connected and power is applied the gauge will take some times to settle. The meter should be drawing 200-250 ma. Initially the gauge is settled when the contacts open and the ammeter meter shows zero current for a moment. The contacts should open/close at a rate of once every 5 seconds.

 Test setup



Note ammeter shows ~300 ma.













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