We are trying to determine why we do not have power to the fuel side of the speed fuel gauge. In the manual on page 6-10 it references fuel tank sender main is on the accessory panel.Not sure what you are referring to. The helm switch panel has push button type circuit breakers for each switch on the panel itself. The AC/DC panel in the cabin has switches that are also circuit breakers. There are fuses in the battery compartment (battery charger leads) and electronics installers often put additional fuses in a BlueSea fuse block for items they add to the boat such as radios, etc. Mine is under the electronics hatch and in the overhead radio compartment. There are also circuit breakers for bilge pumps and stereo memory on the battery switch face area.
We are trying to determine why we do not have power to the fuel side of the speed fuel gauge. In the manual on page 6-10 it references fuel tank sender main is on the accessory
Thank you for your response. We will continue to try to figure it out.Not sure what you are referring to. The helm switch panel has push button type circuit breakers for each switch on the panel itself. The AC/DC panel in the cabin has switches that are also circuit breakers. There are fuses in the battery compartment (battery charger leads) and electronics installers often put additional fuses in a BlueSea fuse block for items they add to the boat such as radios, etc. Mine is under the electronics hatch and in the overhead radio compartment. There are also circuit breakers for bilge pumps and stereo memory on the battery switch face area.
Thank you. This helped me to understand how it functions.I am not sure what you are describing but if you expect to see voltage on the lead from the tank level sender, you won't. The sender is not powered, it is a device that changes resistance as the level/float change.
As far as I know there is one power feed to the gauge and prrobably a second switched feed for the back lighting.
If the display self tests on power up and displays any info, it has power.