Reflex wrote:
Sounds like an urban legend to me. Short of pressurizing the tank, I don't know of any realistic method of creating such a gauge, especially with how people top off and do other such inconsistant methods of filling up.
If for airplanes they can have the following guidelines (see below), I'm sure the Caddy engineers could come up with something similar - I am just stating that the public does not want this - and to my knowledge the fedral regulations are very loose if not existent.
REGULATIONS FOR AIRPLANE FUEL GAUGES - almost linear I would say:
TSO-C55 specifies a tolerance of 3% of full scale. This applies to the whole system, end-to-end, including the sensor in the tank as well as the gauge. (Note that the sensor is sometimes called a transducer, but more often called a fuel sender or fuel quantity sender.)
# Similarly, expired standard MIL-G-26988C (reference 3) specified the following:
Class I: ±4 percent of indication, ±2 percent of full scale
Class II: ±2 percent of indication, ±0.75 percent of full scale
Class III: ±1 percent of indication, ±0.5 percent of full scale.