RobertISaar Posted August 27, 2013 Author Report Share Posted August 27, 2013 wouldn't know. seeing how you're using 97 and 98 parts, there could be a difference in the fuel guage that would cause some really weird things to happen. would have to pull whatever cluster you plan on using and measure it with a multimeter. but the RC mod.... turns out it didn't work, the guage was specifically designed to react as quickly as it does and to add enough capacitance to it's circuit to slow it down to an acceptable speed would cause a LOT of heat to be generated in both the guage's windings and in the fuel level sender itself whenever the needle attemps to move... so i dropped that project and moved onto a different method. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
l67ss Posted August 27, 2013 Report Share Posted August 27, 2013 Let me know wut you figure out btw im using the 97 cluster i wanna run it til the odometer zeros out(its at just under 263k miles) my fuel gauge is actually pretty correct other than between 1/4 and 1/2 tank wouldn't know. seeing how you're using 97 and 98 parts, there could be a difference in the fuel guage that would cause some really weird things to happen. would have to pull whatever cluster you plan on using and measure it with a multimeter. but the RC mod.... turns out it didn't work, the guage was specifically designed to react as quickly as it does and to add enough capacitance to it's circuit to slow it down to an acceptable speed would cause a LOT of heat to be generated in both the guage's windings and in the fuel level sender itself whenever the needle attemps to move... so i dropped that project and moved onto a different method. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobertISaar Posted August 27, 2013 Author Report Share Posted August 27, 2013 being a 97, the fuel guage is actually controlled by the PCM.... the PCM reads the fuel level sender and outputs a signal for the cluster. i IMAGINE the same hardware could be used to skew the voltage that the PCM sees, but i'm not 100% on that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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