I've been doing that every evening now for days. I have had enough of it. It seems that I may have gotten it fixed this time. Here's the whole story... Way back, a year or more ago, I was toying with a Holley ProJection throtle body fuel injection system on my car. During this experiment, I took the fuel sender out and welded (soldered actually) an extra fitting into it for the fuel return line. That went fine, for the most part. After I abandoned the ProJection system and went back to old faithful TQ, I had to plug that newly created fitting in the sender. No matter what I did, I couldn't get it to stop leaking. It only seeped really but it was enough to cause that gas smell around the car after I had filled the tank. This spring, I took the sender out again (no easy feat). I took the extra fitting out and soldered a small piece of metal over the hole and soldered that up nicely. The job was thorough and it didn't leak anymore. I tested this by filling the tank up all the way. I then noticed that the fuel guage didn't work and the red light was always on in the fuel guage. When I'd taken the sender out the last time, the grounding strap for the sender had broken and I had forgotten to repair it and reinstall it. I was sure this was the problem. On Saturday, I repaired that grounding strap but that didn't help. I also noticed that the thing was seeping a little again...VERY little mind you. On Sunday, I was at the Toy Store (Auto Supply Store) and I noticed some gas tank repair compound. I bought it and then took the sender out AGAIN and put this putty type stuff all around the fittings etc to be sure it wouldn't leak. This stuff BTW was really awesome. It is two putty strips sandwiching some kind of hardner. You just break off what you need and then kneed it into a ball untill the colour is uniform. You can feel it start to get warm as the hardner starts working. It hardens nearly hard but still remains a little plyable. Anyway, that stopped the leak but the guage still didn't work. Tonight, I took the danged thing out AGAIN and also took the one out of my T&C parts car. I had to syphon the gas outa the T&C as it had over a half tank still in it. (I can still taste gas) I had to fill my neighbour's pickup with the gas cause I had nowhere to put it. Bonus for him! I noticed that the sender was about 2 inches longer than the one that came out of the Newporker. This made it harder to put back in because the frame rail is very close to the tank in that spot. I took both senders to the bench and checked their resistance (what I should have done in the first place). The Newporker's didnt't work at all. The T&C's worked perfectly. I reinstalled the T&C's sender in the Newporker, removed it again so I could install the rubber gasket, reinstalled it AGAIN and tightened everything up. After I let the car down, I am sure the gas covers the sender and it doesn't leak so, wish me luck! Now for the ironic part! You'll recall that this ALL STARTED because I wanted to put an extra fitting into the sender plate for the EFI return line! Well! The T&C's sender HAS ONE!!!! I actually had to plug THAT fitting when I installed it in the Newporker! AAARRRGGGGHHHH!!!! Brad Hogg Winnipeg, Manitoba http://www.nybclub.org/bradhogg/index.htm 1978 Chrysler Newport 4-door Hard Top 1976 Chrysler New Yorker Brougham 4-door Hard Top 1976 Chrysler Town & COuntry 9 Passenger Station Wagon <--parts 1968 Chrysler Newport Custom 4-door Sedan