Just went thru all this while repairing the fuel tank gauge on my 58 Edsel Roundup.
Essentially the 58 Edsel Roundup is a 57 Ford 2 door wagon. Same fuel tank as your Country Sedan and all of the rest of the Ford wagons.The Ranchero also uses this same fuel tank.
The fuel tank float sending units for the Ford wagons and the Ranchero are impossible to find.No one makes a reproduction unit.
The usual ohmage of the Ford fuel tank sending units read from 75 - 10 OHMS.
While I cant confirm this next statement but I believe that the wagon/Ranchero tank sending units do have a different measurement than 75 - 10. I have never had a good original tank unit availiable to extract that information from.The ohmage difference is just my opinion based on my calibration attempts.
I can confirm that the sending unit in the tank has to work in tandom with the resistance of the dash fuel gauge.If the tank sending unit resistance is incorrect the dash gauge will be inaccurate.THIS PIECE OF INFORMATION IS VERY IMPORTANT!
There is a difference in the tanks sending unit float arms length when comparing the wagon/Ranchero unit to the normal passenger car tank sending unit.The wagon/Ranchero float arm is much longer.
I compared a new reproduction tank sending unit for the passenger cars to my used non working wagons unit.
I calculated the length differences where the float arm rested on the old original compared to the repro.I then cut off both the original and the repro float arm. I then soldered the old longer float arm onto the new repro sending unit.
This gave me a working fuel tank sending unit BUT it was no where near proper calibration on the dash gauge.I believe this is due to a difference in the repro tank sender having a different ohmage then what a wagon requires and also the float arm being not quite bent right.
With the tank out of the car and a jumper wire attached between the tank sender and the wiring harness,I put in 5 gallons of (non flammable) water.Its a 20 gallon tank so it should read 1/4 tank or close.
The dash gauge hardly moved off of empty.I made sure that the tanks sending unit float arm was in a reasonable floating position in the fluid in the tank.I did this to make sure that it was not a float arm position error within the tank.It still showed way lower than 1/4 tank.
I started adding resistance by wire clipping a resistor placed in line between the tank sending unit and the wiring harness.
After a few incorrect trials of different value resistors, I came up with adding a 30 OHM / 10 watt resistor inline to get the proper calibration on my dash gauge at 1/4 of a tank.
Of course I checked it at half and a full tank of fluid also.Thats how I settled on the use of the 30 OHM resistor.It reads proper at full,at 1/2 and 1/4.
I"m not gonna run it below a 1/4 and empty to explore the accuracy of the gauge in that region.
There is also the combination of bending the tank sending unit float arm to the proper position where it rides on the fluid to get the correct calibration.
I ended up perminantly installing that resistor in the spare tire area which is where the fuel tank sending wire runs thru.Built a small non electrical conductive cover for it ,imbedded it in silicone and all is well!
Yes,it was a PITA but its done and works great.
Hope this helps.
Oldmics