James, Many years ago when the supply of original fuel senders was exhausted I took on a research project to develop a repair procedure for this very important device. I used three senders using different repair techniques. After six month's of tests and trials none of the senders held up. In my opinion repair of the original sender is not suggested. This device, which sends an electrical signal to the dash fuel gauge to indicate the amount of fuel remaining in the tank is of marginal quality. Its design flaw is not the electrical design or circuit, it is the materials it is built of. Most of the unit is made of plastic with weak electrical components and connections. Consider yourself lucky that you were able to resurrect your sender but I don't agree with your statement: "If you were to rate on a difficulty scale of 1-10 with 10 being the most complicated I would rate putting your key in the ignition as 8 and fixing the sender unit as 10" As for as repair of the sender; just attempting to take it apart and putting it back together is a challenge. I have no disagreement with an owner with the knowledge, mechanical ability, and proper tools attempting such repairs, but I would be very cautious about suggesting that this is an easy repair for the average "shadetree mechanic", especially when you consider that the procedure involves a "live" electrical component that sits inside the fuel tank; remember "flight 800". DMC Joe "We're here to help you" DMC Help / De Lorean Services / <dmchelp@xxxx> Web Site: <www.deloreanservices.com> ----- Original Message ----- From: Vin#5462 <dmc12@xxxx> To: DeLorean Mailing List <dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, March 10, 2001 4:50 AM Subject: [DML] Re. Sender Unit hard to repair > I would like to dispel the myth that it is almost "impossible to repair the > fuel sender unit" if you take the unit out and take it apart which consists > of one nut, then you can see just how simple the workings are.