Hey Gene: A important thing to give to Univair is how many screws you have  
holding the assembly together. The gauges were made with both 6 and 12 
screws. I  also found that even though no gasket may have been used originally, 
that a  total of three gaskets will help to keep the assembly from leaking. 
When  assembling the unit, use some fuel resistant sealer such as SEALUBE,  
will  help in avoiding the seepage. You can make your own gaskets from a 
fuel  resistant material purchased from your local auto parts store.
Lynn Nelsen
 
 
In a message dated 7/5/2010 10:45:45 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
 
 
Hi All, I have a little something I'd like to address on my E..This is the  
wing tank fuel gauge cover. The gauge works, but the gauge is competely  
unreadable in flight..

Upon digging through all of my hardcopy parts  manual and service manual, I 
can't find anything giving parts number  information or a blow-up of the 
assembly. All that I have is that my parts  manual references a page in a 
"service memo and service manual" for serial  numbers 2623 through 3467 (mine 
is 
4964) 
Does anyone have a scan of the  updated parts page that they would be 
willing to share???
or
Univair has  a gauge cover (aluminum tank) 48119 on pg 3-12 of the 2009 
catalog listed ...  Is this the plastic cover that I need to replace, and is 
there anything else  (gasket) that needs to be replaced to reassemble 
correctly???

thanks in  advance,

///Gene



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