They were the same in lots of B & C bodies, trouble is it wasn't a common option, all body styles are getting harder to find & it's a 45+ year old electrical part... I couldn't find a good used one back in the eighties... Might be better off just to pay the price for an NOS one....
Doubt this is right but it's the right pt number....
http://relay.dvautoparts.com/discount-store/1970-1971-1972-1973-cuda-challenger-full-w-jkjmqrmjjjjlHeres the I gotta have it price...
http://www.hiltopautoparts.com/product/nos-mopar-low-fuel-relay-1970-1-plymouth-dodge-e-body-cuda-challenger/This guy shows one in stock....
Owner: Jack Koziol
Email:
Sales@cjmotorparts.comPhone: (732) 446-3738
Fax: (732) 446-0486
This may help... Unfortunately RTE is out of business
Theory of operation:
+12V Power us fed into the IGN and COM terminal when the key is turned on.
Vehicle Ground is connected to the GND terminal through the case of the relay.
The GAGE terminal is connected to the fuel gauge, where the limiter would be connected in a normal car that did not have a low fuel feature.
The other side of the fuel gauge is connected to the standard Mopar fuel sending unit, same as in any mopar. The fuel sending unit will have a resistance of approximately 10 Ohms when full and approximately 80 ohms when empty.
The LAMP terminal is connected to the low fuel light lamp.
There is a coil of magnet wire between the IGN terminal and the interior point labeled X that is about 6 Ohms. The resistance of the X coil, the middle heater, the resistance in the fuel gauge, and the sending unit resistance all add up to control the amount of current going through the middle heater coil when the limiter is in its on state.
The X terminal feeds voltage into the middle heater coil when the top bi-metallic strip (limiter) is closed, when tends to open the bottom points. When the bottom points are open, then the low fuel light is off. The fuel sending unit being at full (10 Ohms) means that a lot of current goes through the middle heater strip, keeping the bottom bi-metallic strip strongly open. Note that the middle heater strip is only on when the voltage limiter is on.
The top bi-metallic strip is in fact a voltage limiter, just like the limiter on the back of your dash. The only difference between the standard voltage limiter and the limiter inside this relay is that this limiter is set to stay on longer to compensate for the voltage loss in the X coil and the middle heater strip. In other words, it is set to deliver the same amount of power to the fuel gauge as a standard limiter would, even though there is the added resistance of the X coil and the middle heater strip.
The bottom bi-metallic strip is a latching relay. It is open when there is enough average current in the middle heater coil to make it stay open. The current in the middle heater coil is controlled by the fuel sending unit resistance. When the fuel sending unit resistance gets high enough so that the middle heater coil allows the bottom strip to close, then the bottom bi-matallic strip feeds power to the LAMP terminal through the bottom heater. When the LAMP is lit, this causes the bottom heater strip to heat up which tends to force the bottom bi-metallic strip to stay closed, acting as a hysteresis element. This is needed to make sure the low fuel relay won't open and close as the limiter turns on and off.
There is a small amount of voltage loss in the bottom heater strip, which will cause the low fuel light to be slightly dimmer than all the other bulbs in the car. This bulb is a standard 14.4 Volt bulb, number 1892-USA part number. The resistance of this bulb is important in that it helps set the current in the bottom heater coil. The resistance of the lamp is listed as 120 Ohms (cold?). The resistance of the bottom heater when cold is about 1 Ohm.
RTE will eventually make a replacement circuit board for this relay for all those people out there who need a new relay, or who would just like to add a low fuel light to you car. When we make this board, we will make it so that it can go into the original low fuel relay metal can, and we will also have some 4-40 holes in the board so that those of you without the relay metal can will be able to mount the board under the dash.