fuel gage sender unit is faulty
If it takes 30.00 to top off the gas tank, but the gas gauge shows full on an 85 F150 4.9 Straight 6, it is likely that the gauge is not reading correctly. Replacing the gauge cable can remedy this.
The temperature sender (the sensor that sends the temperature signal to the gauge) has to be immersed in coolant in order to correctly read the temperature. If the coolant is so low that it leaves the sender high and dry, the temperature shown on the gauge will not be a true reading. if the sensor is not immersed in the coolant, there a big chance it wont read at all...
Unless the entire gauge cluster was replaced with one out of another car, I would have to say the gauge is faulty. Is the car named "Christine" by chance?
The gas gauge sensor is most likely stuck. It is inside of the tank and over time it will get corroded.
There is none. But you can try disconnecting the wiring attached to the fuel sending unit and look at the fuel gauge. If it is giving you an empty reading, the fuel gauge is faulty and should be replaced.
I would need to know the model of your browning shotgun along with the serial number to answer your question correctly.
A low coolant level could cause the temp gauge not to read correctly. A faulty temp gauge sending unit could also be the cause. The coolant leak, you would have to find the source of the leak to determine the cause.
Have you replaced your air filter lately? If not, try that, reset the computer by unplugging the battery and see if it clears the code.
if its computer orientated i would disconect the battery for 20 minutes
The simplest method would be to mount a pressure gauge onto the chamber, then to observe whether the reading changes. It should remain at "zero" indicated gauge pressure. If your instrumentation is relative to atmospheric pressure, it would be a "minus" pressure and would vary with local atmospheric pressure. For very accurate readings, you would need something more sophisticated, such as an ionisation gauge.
It would crash on Saturn.
Saturn has a solid surface so if you land on Saturn you would sink into hotter and deeper surface so you would die.