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#1
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Capacitance Tube Orientation
The orientation of the tubes were with the white plastic insulator on the bottom.
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#2
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I'm going to pull mine in the next week for a CIES update, I'll take pics if you still need them. They are very easy to remove and generally easy to put back in.
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#3
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Quote:
‘77 NA G model with long range tanks (150 gal). |
#4
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Quote:
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#5
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What is the orientation recommendation from cies?
Can sensors be installed without removing upper wing panels? This is a near future project for me. |
#6
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Quote:
As for orientation, tbd. |
#7
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On mine, I also pulled the wing panels. Not fun. Recommend supporting the booms and wing with jackstands. On my inboard tank, the forward access port (of three in the inboard tank) was the desired location for the sender. My tanks had baffles that precluded installing the CiES sender in the forward port….so I put them in the middle port, angled the float towards the fuel drains.
My problem is, my inboard sender tops out before fuel floats the outboard sender. Im considering pulling the damn panels again, cut the baffle, and install the sender in the forward port to get more “up” float travel on the inboard sender so the outboard sender will float before the inboard sender hits the top of the tank. Good luck with y’all’s installs! Also…pro tip: power the CiES senders from ships power, not the gea24, and run both sets of sender signal wires to one gea24. Make sure you get gi275 software version 2.42 or 2.43. |