Personally I feel the Kus can be calibrated as accurately as the TLM100. The advantage of the Kus is it is 75% cheaper and can be calibrated without draining the tank. If you read my thread about calibrating the tank you will get a very accurate reading. When I calibrated my tank I emailed Fluid Motion Customer service and asked for a tank drawing of my 80 gallon tank.
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Using the dimensions provided in the drawings can be used to calculate fuel quantity at a specific fuel level. Once this is calculated the float is moved to a level where the resistance reading changes, mark this, measure the travel, compare it to the tank calculations. enter the amount of fuel at this level into the EVC. I have done this for the 80 gallon tank. If I was a Ranger technician rigging a boat for a customer for delivery. I would have all my calculations Done for that model and it would take me 10 minutes to calibrate a sender unit for accuracy. If I was a technician delivering Rangers and Cutwaters I would spend the time and do calculations for all models with different size tanks.( There are not that many!!) Record the calculations, purchase a sending unit that is used for each model (under $70 per sending unit and have these labeled and kept in my tool box for rigging and delivering a new boat to a customer. (That is a cheap tool! About equal to the price of a quality wrench!!)This is what a quality dealership would expect their technician to do and what a Quality boat manufacture would require. Many quality boat manufactures do this in the factory as part of the Quality Control steps confirming accuracy of a fuel gauge. A boat fuel gauge installed today should be as accurate as your automobile.
You will spend more time draining the tank and measuring the fuel going back in the tank then you would if you got a tank drawing and sat at your desk and figured out the gallons per volume. When I did my calculations I figure the volume for the irrgualt ship of the tank first. I drew a line across the tank. I then calculated how many gallons were in that section of the tank. Then I calculated the volume of the regular shape of the tank. Once I had theses amounts I could figure the amount of fuel at different levels based where the resistance changes are. If you look at the picture I posted you can see how I make the sender. This was all done with fuel in the tank and the new sender before installation into the tank.
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This is the first step,Have the new sender wired into the system but not in the tank.
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Select empty tank calibration, ( The factory uses full tank calibration. This is old school and not acute at all!)
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Enter fuel tank capacity
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After this go thru the filling stages of the tank by moving the float up the sender shaft. Using the lines marks on the shaft where resistance changes are. Using your tank volume = gallons calibrations that you figured out from the tank dimension drawing enter the percentages of fuel/ gallons of fuel.
It sounds complicated but it is not. Once you think about it it is not hard. If an old dumb boat mechanic (me) can figure it out anyone can!