Okay folks I went ahead and took my truck's fuel pump assembly out to at least take a look at it.
Like most of you guys recommended.
Picture 1 fuel pump assembly laying on first side.
In this picture, picture 1 you can see the float arm and sender are up.
Picture 2 fuel pump assembly laying on its other side.
In this picture, picture 2 you can see the fuel pump better along with everything else.
Picture 3
In this picture, picture 3 you see a close up of how they ran the black ground wire from the sender to the metal plate that the center is attached to.
Picture 4
In this picture, picture 4 you can see the underside i.e. the side that's in the tank of plug pens/pegs/posts for the plug.
The black one is the ground for the fuel pump.
The red one is the power for the fuel pump.
The blue one is the sender, send out wire. I.E. the wire that on the other side of the plug becomes wire 29.
As you can see there is no wire on the last spot.
What I'm thinking is the factory believed that when they soldered the ground wire for the sender to the plate that it's attached to the ground would run from the plate to the pipe or tube that goes up to the top of the fuel pump assembly and then on to or into the cap ring or whatever it's called at the top of the fuel pump assembly and therefore run to the plug pen, peg, post.
I hooked my multimeter to the actual contact points of the fuel sender and it does work I gots readings big time.
I believe all I need to do is solder a wire from the underside of the ground pen, peg, post whatever it called to the ground plug on the sender itself.
Notice I also have a bucket covering the actual hole in my gas tank it happens to be sprinkling here right now.
Even if it wasn't sprinkling I think the bucket is a good idea to keep things from getting in there.