Hi folks,
I've owned and driven a variety of vehicles, and I know that no fuel gauge is perfect. 1/2 is never 1/2, 1/4 is never 1/4, and so on. Even so, I think the CRD has about the most inaccurate fuel gauge I've ever seen on a vehicle. On a recent trip, I made the following observations:
- The needle didn't even come down to "full" until 78.7 miles.
- The needle hit 3/4 at 144.3 (65.6 miles later, but this was just after an overnight cold start and I think the cold fuel changed the level indication).
- The needle hit 1/2 at 266.2 (121.9 miles later).
- The needle hit 1/4 at 376.3 (110.1 miles later).
- The needle hit empty at 432.9 (a mere 56.6 miles later).
The last 1/4 is what really kills me. Boy, once you hit the 1/4 mark, you'd better have an idea on where you want to refuel. You can glance down every minute or two and actually see the needle dropping. This is in sharp contrast to the beginning of the tank, when the needle seems to be epoxied just to the right of full!
I had toyed with the idea of figuring out an op-amp circuit which would normalize the fuel sender signal to provide a more linear representation of fuel level. However, if the EVIC uses the sender level for its range calculations, then attempting to "fix" the fuel level gauge in this way will mess up with EVIC. (I don't have an EVIC, but I think I'd like to add one thanks to the recent writeup on how to do it.)
Share your stories! Has the CRD's bipolar fuel gauge ever surprised you or left you in a pinch?
- Chris