Stewart Warner makes a BRASS float
and a synthetic float. I only found this out last friday at my real auto parts store. The guy that owns it lets me look through his catalog set (about 4 feet wide and current) after hours. I spend several hours a day after work there cruising through the catalogs.
SO, we were trying to get floats from Roberts Manufacturing and they no longer make the 2" round brass floats and we thought we had hit a dead end on that short of having a special one time production run.
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I ordered 3 of the RM183's (@$7. 54 but min of $20 for cc order) from Robert Manufacturing to have a float alternative that should fit if the SW float does not fit bouyancy or mechanically wise. Depending on the outcome I should have a couple of spare floats. Will see what works best.
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Well, in crusing I found the SW physical components, then found the equation for parallel resistors, then wrote a short spreadsheet that I could change the resistor values in and the spreadsheet would do a complete recalculation to see how to narrow this thing down, that's how we found the 2700 Ohm value.
Then I went back and reread every fuel level catalog page I could find and remember. There the brass float was as an option from SW.
Interestingly enough I am going to put a in bed tank in and I wanted a simple fuel level indicator not necessarily electrical (I am getting tired of running electrical every time I do something). I found that Tempo makes mechanical fuel level indicators for marine applications. I found a mechanical sender that fits my tank (18h x 12w x 60l, 55 gallons, from a local manufacturer of tanks) and ordered it. It came and guess what kind of float it has?, yep identical (except for shape) to the OEM float. I'm puzzled why if it is such a problem for us why is it not a problem for marine diesels? I am really puzzled about that. Maybe DC got the cheapest one they could and bought the lowest quality, I do not know. I am going to put the SW brass float on the mechanical tank gauge though. I will also disect both of them (thoughts of high school biology and frogs

) and see if I can figure out IF there are any differences. There has to be something, but what?
Anyway, I am getting close to "low tank" and will drop the tank and do the refurb of the OEM fuel level indicator to see what that entails, and while I am in there will take pics and measurements to see which SW indicator will fit. This should give us (TDR) two options:
1. refurb the OEM rheostat and put the SW brass float on it.
2. put the whole new SW sender with the brass float in and parallel a resistor
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3. what about a 3rd option of put the SW rheostat in, in place of the OEM rheostat. I mean mount the SW rheostat to the OEM fuel canister either where the OEM rheostat is or create a new mounting location on the canister, use the SW brass float, install a 2700 ohm resistor parallel, AND you do not have to cut the tank and get all the benefits of #2 above.
The problem we have with the canister are,
1. fuel pickup which is corrected by the DrawStraw
2. rheostat failure which is corrected by the SW rheostat
3. deterrioating float which is corrected by the SW brass float
You have already fixed #1. You correct the remaining 2 DC design flaws by installing the industrial quality rheostat, and brass float.
Nothing says that the SW rheostat HAS to be on the SW tank fixture, how would it know?
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If you wanted to put the SW rheostat and float in the SW frame that would require a cut into the tank. However, just forward of the canister on the 2002 tank there is a step and a mounded into the tank a place to mount the sender (ie thicker tank material, flat, and the tank side is shape formed so that a indicator could be put there and not have any mechanical interfearance from anything. SW has a mounting kit just for this purpose with a backing plate, screws, fuel proof gaskets to mate exactely with their sender which also has its matching plate and a fuel proof gasket. The sandwich of SW indicator, gasket, tank, gasket, backing plate all screwed together should do the trick.
I think the flat mounting location is a carry over from DC using the same gas tank for both diesel and gassers. For gassers there is a tank vent mounted there and also in the top of the tank toward the rear of the tank. However, since diesel does not need the tank vent it is not used but the mounting moulded location is still there. I think this location because you can mount it and get your arm to it to hold wrenches to tighten the mounting screws and nuts. Perfect place to put the SW if you go that way.
Getting closer to "getter done!"
Bob Weis