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Faulty fuel gauge

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Old May 3rd, 2023, 01:06   #1
Beadybc
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Default Faulty fuel gauge

Turned the car on earlier and it had decided that there was no more fuel, which is strange since I put £50 worth of fuel in last night. So I went to fill up the tank and it only took £15 worth until it was full.

Whilst driving along the motorway the gauge crept up until it showed about 30% full but went no further than that for a while. After I came off the the motorway and drove around a bit it started fluctuating anywhere between 5% and 60%, it didn’t fluctuate quickly and it never went over 60% full.

Is my car a special self-generating fuel model or should I start looking for a problem somewhere?

1997 945 B230FK
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Old May 3rd, 2023, 07:20   #2
SalvadorP
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Originally Posted by Beadybc View Post
Is my car a special self-generating fuel model
Most likely.

Or, it can be faulty. You should probably remove the instrument cluster and inspect for a bad connection. A multimeter would help.
Or the tank sender is bad.
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Old May 3rd, 2023, 07:59   #3
Beadybc
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Originally Posted by SalvadorP View Post
Most likely.

Or, it can be faulty. You should probably remove the instrument cluster and inspect for a bad connection. A multimeter would help.
Or the tank sender is bad.
What connection would I be using the multimeter on and what reading should I be getting?
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Old May 3rd, 2023, 09:14   #4
john.wigley
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Temperamental fuel gauges are a well known issue on 7 and 9 series cars, 'Beadybc'. I lived with one for years. Just brimmed the tank every time, zeroed the trip, drove c250 miles and repeat. Carried a 5L can for emergencies. I never had cause to use it myself, but was able to help out a number of other motorists!

Regards, John.
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Old May 3rd, 2023, 11:22   #5
SalvadorP
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Originally Posted by Beadybc View Post
What connection would I be using the multimeter on and what reading should I be getting?
This guy had a similar issue and he goes through the process of diagnostic and fixing it in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWq4TIeSSv0&t=550s

Also this thread from another forum might have useful info for you: https://volvoforums.com/forum/volvo-...-issues-82850/
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Last edited by SalvadorP; May 3rd, 2023 at 11:24.
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Old May 3rd, 2023, 13:17   #6
Forrest
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There is fairly comprehensive trouble-shooting guidance in the FAQ too.

https://www.volvoclub.org.uk/faq/Ele...augeFluctuates

There should be a multi-plug connector in the luggage compartment area which makes it reasonably simple to interrupt the circuit to the sender for testing purposes. There are four wires in this connector. The thinner ones are for the fuel gauge and the thicker ones for the in-tank pump.

Getting the instrument cluster out on a 940 is quite simple. Accessing the fuel sender a bit less so. This may influence the order in which you test components.

Good luck.
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Old May 4th, 2023, 19:31   #7
gpl1968
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If your gauge is sticking in one position it could be a worn contact on the fuel tank sender.



In the above pic the left hand part is the good one. The part is attached to a float in the fuel level sender and it slides up and down two coiled resistor wires with the rectangular ends making contact, one to each resistor wire. The right hand part is worn with the rectangular contact patches worn and liable to catch on the resistor wires giving a bad reading on the fuel gauge.

I had this problem and managed to silver solder replacement rectangles onto the part using nickel silver. It works fine now although it still sticks sometimes.

There is an article on the subject in the FAQ: linky.
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