Looks like there MAY be a little problem, or I just don't see what should be changed.
Remembering-
Sender: 4
hm: Full - 60
hm: Empty
With the circuit built, Mock-up 12v battery hooked up, and hooked up the resistances look like this-
What the sender is turned into, between GND and the spade connector that plugs into the gauge, they read: 129.2K
hm: Full - 288.7K
hm: Empty
Current is 4mA at those same points.
Battery reads 12.25v
Voltage from GND to the gauge through the sender and circuit reads 0.29v with the sender at empty, and 0.13v when full.
This causes the gauge to want to read at 1/4 tank at Full, and well past the E when Empty.
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v207/norcal02/other stuff/IMG_3144.jpg
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v207/norcal02/other stuff/IMG_3145.jpg
Next time i put this circuit together I'll be smarter and do it on my breadboard. Then I can more easily change out the resistance values. FWIW, I used a 39
hm: to replicate the original gauge, where to be entirely accurate, should be about 41
hm:, and instead of 4.2K in R1, the cloesst single resistor was a 3.9K
hm:. Lowering that resistance by 300
hm: only changed the base mA by about .3 IIRC, I have it all written down somewhere. Could that change the end result that much though? The resistance is in the K range not hundreds, but with reads due to the mA to drive the gauge being proper if I understand correctly. Keeping with that, I would need to adjust the resistance measured through the circuit must be lowered as a whole a total of ~50k to 240k
hm: and spread out by ~47k
hm: to reach down to ~33k
hm:, or something equivalent, I presume, assuming the battery voltage at only 12v didn't effect it too much. I'm wishing I didn't solder it all together. I bought some extra's online along with some other bits I need for a related but unrelated project, so when they show up I'll do the breadboard. Till then, well, that's where it stands. I'll try to figure some of it out tomorrow too. It's too late right now for me to be thinking logically about it 
Remembering-
Sender: 4
With the circuit built, Mock-up 12v battery hooked up, and hooked up the resistances look like this-
What the sender is turned into, between GND and the spade connector that plugs into the gauge, they read: 129.2K
Current is 4mA at those same points.
Battery reads 12.25v
Voltage from GND to the gauge through the sender and circuit reads 0.29v with the sender at empty, and 0.13v when full.
This causes the gauge to want to read at 1/4 tank at Full, and well past the E when Empty.
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v207/norcal02/other stuff/IMG_3144.jpg
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v207/norcal02/other stuff/IMG_3145.jpg
Next time i put this circuit together I'll be smarter and do it on my breadboard. Then I can more easily change out the resistance values. FWIW, I used a 39
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