I agree with Stephen ........ I have also got out my spare fuel sender and it is a VDO one as is the TSU which I am sure now you do not have. Below is a pic of a TSU for reference.
Thanks for the info on the connector with the metal clip ....... but I was asking about the other one in my last post which has the white cable tie around. It is not really related to our discussions here at the moment ..... it is just my curiosity as it is shown in the manual but unnamed and numbered, so when you have a minute ....
Just going on a bit from my last posts thoughts ...... if you are still awake. My reference to the hole that I said you could see in my pic ..... well having got it out .... that is not a hole ...just a scuff mark. The actual hole X 2 at the bottom of the tube .... see pic below .... is only 1.75mm in diameter, but there are two smaller holes at the top .... 1mm .... which lets the air out of the tube as the tank is being filled. This tends to underline my point that if you switch on the ign too quickly, the tube may not be up to the correct level compared to the fuel in the tank. This will be more pronounced if one is filling a near empty tank. I have not noticed it being a problem as I never let the tank get below say 8 galls. By the time I have gone and payed for the fuel and returned, I suppose the tube has filled up.
Now that brings up another point ......... I appears that because my tank was low, I returned to the car and switched on the ign before the tube was full. Hence the 14.1 galls. I then did a reset but by then the tube was full and the gauge then read correctly 15.1 galls. Now, I wonder ....... had I not done a reset and the tube now being full ...... would the reading have read correctly the next time I switched on the ign ...... My thinking is that it would have as it would just be the same as topping up the tank where the fuel gauge would read the extra fuel topped up.
So I think that if one is having problems with the gauge which does not respond to a reset properly ......... then fill the tank to the brim ..... if possible wait for a period of time before switching on the ign. If the reading is below 15 galls ....... Drive off and pull up after about 5 minutes switch off the ign ...... wait about 1 or 2 minutes ..... in the later Alps case, for the TSU timer relay to drop out, switch on the ign and see if the gauge now reads 15 or so galls. If it does ..... all is well.
There are two pics below one is for the TSU which I think Murf will not have ...... it overall length is just over 5 inches long so you can't miss it.
The other pic is of the very small hole .... 1.75mm x2 ..... that the fuel has to enter the tube when filling. It is certainly going to take a little while to fill from near empty. The vernier gauge is there only for scale.
IMG_2101.JPG
IMG_2100.JPG
A note to Darren .....
I don't think any other car would use such a system,
I think the reason they do it this way is because of the "L" shape of the tank. It would be impossible to get any form of float system to be able to follow the reducing level of fuel as the first .. say, 4 galls ...the level will drop fast than when the fuel level reached the lower section remembering we are measuring to one tenth of a gallon.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
1990 GTA Atmo, 2003 Jaguar X type 2.5SE Auto, 2018 Kia Picanto GT-Line-S 1.25