Date: Fri, 6 Mar 2009 20:28:52 -0800
Reply-To: neil N <musomuso@GMAIL.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: neil N <musomuso@GMAIL.COM>
Subject: Re: Fuel gauge sender ground location
In-Reply-To: <9420a0718949be6a47906d3cbbf47fdf@oberon.ark.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
On Fri, Mar 6, 2009 at 1:15 PM, Philip Zimmerman
<philzimm1@oberon.ark.com> wrote:
> On Mar 6, 2009, at 10:32 AM, neil N wrote:
>
> On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 7:52 PM, Philip Zimmerman
> <philzimm1@oberon.ark.com> wrote:
>>
>> Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2009 15:55:17 -0500
>> David ably typed:
>> Can anyone point me exactly to the grounding point location for the
>> fuel gauge sender on '89 2WD?............
>> -------------------------------
>
> .....
> Phil pecked and erased:
>>
>> The physical ground point for the gauge sender ('87 2WD confirmed) is
>> located on the inside, driver's side Main longitudinal Frame-Rail.
>> About halfway between the front/rear ends of the fuel tank.
>
> Neil says:
> Ok.
>
> So P 97.127 in Bentley shows the fuel sender ground at "29" which is
> "near Digifant control unit". A misprint? Or is my Vanagon
> "geography" off?
>
> Here's a pic of my '81. I moved the fuel sender ground wire forward
> when I had the gas tank out, but am almost certain it's the ground
> wire in question.
>
> http://tubaneil.googlepages.com/FuelLevelSenderGround.jpg/FuelLevelSenderGround-full;init:.jpg
>
> Is this near where you found your wire Phil?
> --------------------------------------------------
> Phil responds:
> Neil,
> Relatively near, as in, at least at the correct end of the Van..... 8>)
> For the '87 model year, the ground I speak of above, is located on the main
> (longitudinal) frame-member.
> At least for your '81, the Bentley is more or less correct, than for most
> other years.
> Quoting Bentley, page 97.17 for ground #15 (fuel level sender, current track
> #39) "at left front of crossmember". Which, from your picture, is where you
> found (or relocated) this ground wire.
>
> To my knowledge and physical examination(s), the Bentley, page 97.127 is
> misprint. The ground wire the Bentley speaks of here, "near Dig....", is the
> ground for the Dig Control Unit only. Not until the 1990 models and forward
> does the Bentley finally get close to describing where the Fuel Sender
> ground is physically located: pages 97.203/97.209 "near fuel gauge sending
> unit". Rather vague at best but, at least closer than for the previous years
> of the water cooled models.
>
> Auh, the mystery of locating ground wires on a Vanagon. Where Vans have
> spent time in the rust-belt, numerous electrical issues end up being a
> caused by a bad ground(s). But, where is the friggen ground located? My fav
> issue on my '87 is when the driver's side rear blinker starts acting up and
> working intermittently, I now know, to check-out both front blinker/running
> lights for water ingress. More often than not, clean and dry these out and
> the rear drivers-side works Ok again. FTW?
>
> happy fryeday
>
> Phil Z.
> ---------------------
>
Thanks for the pointer to P 97.203/209 Phil. Good lesson in that. Look
around so to speak. (you'd think I'd have learned'd by now'd)
For sure. Yes. I had looked at P 97.17 too. I was curious because of
David B's original post. I figured the location of the ground
shouldn't have changed after all these years.
And yes. FTW. Crazy details on these Aging Vehicles. Water ingress.
Maybe you could create some kind of permanent water egress. But I
digress. Maybe we could all install some kind of huge grounding bolt
in the middle of the floor and run all the grounds to that. It
wouldn't be in the way. Might make a nice seat too.
;)
Neil.
--
Neil Nicholson '81 VanaJetta 2.0 "Jaco"
http://tubaneil.googlepages.com/
http://groups.google.com/group/vanagons-with-vw-inline-4-cylinder-gas-engines
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