A while back I noticed the low fuel light was not lighting up on my K75 (no gauge--just a light). So, I thinking the bulb was the most likely culprit, and cheap, I replaced it. No joy.
At this point I've done the following:
1) Double-checked the bulb, it lights up. Tested w/ bulb in black plastic holder from cluster.
2) Checked the continuity between the connector at the tank (white wire) and the connector at the instrument cluster (pin 7). Good continuity.
2) Replaced the sending unit (I know, I know).
3) Swapped the instrument cluster off my K100. Hit the key and the low fuel light lights up. (Shoulda done this first.)
4) Pulled the instrument cluster apart. Put power to pin 6 (switched power) and grounded pin 7 (out to sending unit), still no light.
Am I correct in assuming that the sending unit varies the resistance to ground? Or, is this some sorta dueling power sources like the charge light?
One electrical diagram I have shows pin 8 coming from the sending unit too. But, the pin-out diagram for the cluster shows pin 8 as an ABS line (which I don't have). I'm not sure if this is significant or not, but I've been ignoring pin 8 for now.
Are there any relatively common failure modes for this behavior that I have missed? I know the connector between the tank and the bike/cluster is a common failure point but using the other cluster, the low fuel lit up, so I'm assuming the connector is good (also, the bike runs so I know the pump is getting power).
Any ideas?
Thanks,
Tom