FrankieD61
The Stooge Called Slappy: Slappy'sAutoService
I have a fully rebuilt 91 needle cluster I’d be willing to part ways with. It’s out of a 5 speed, with a v6. If you are interested.
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91 to 91 you'll be fine, yes, other than the two concerns you legitimately bring up. If both trucks were V8 gas engines then the tach is a non-issue. Speedometer will likely need recalibrating, because for it to be correct, the donor truck would need the original tire size and axle ratio to match your truck, which isn't likely.Reviving…
I have a 91 sport 4wd with the moonies. I just scored a 91 needles cluster from a V8 truck. The gear ratio/2wd/4wd status from the doner truck is unknown.
If I am following this thread correctly…. Since I am doing a 91 needles to a 91 truck, it should be direct plug n play, only possible gotchas are tach/speedo. Since my doner is a V8 then tach should be fine. Only speedo may be slightly off, If doner was a 2wd with a 3.42 gear and I have 4wd so 3.73 gear…. Sound right to you guys?
Cool thanks! The seller said most of their donors are 4wd. I am still running the OEM tire size…. So at least I have a chance! Cmon baby big money no whammies!!! Lol91 to 91 you'll be fine, yes, other than the two concerns you legitimately bring up. If both trucks were V8 gas engines then the tach is a non-issue. Speedometer will likely need recalibrating, because for it to be correct, the donor truck would need the original tire size and axle ratio to match your truck, which isn't likely.
Richard
It's easier than you'd think, and cheap, to install a DIP switch and make it infinitely configurable: https://www.gmt400.com/threads/recalibrating-1988-1991-speedometer-dash-cluster.62022/Cool thanks! The seller said most of their donors are 4wd. I am still running the OEM tire size…. So at least I have a chance! Cmon baby big money no whammies!!! Lol
He would have to remove the fuses from circuit (desolder) and test them with a multimeter to see if they're open or closed. Then desolder them from the new cluster, and solder them back in place in the correct order. Easy enough. What's easier is soldering a DIP switch in there instead, and set it according to how the original cluster was set. That way he's future-proofed it for re-gearing, or changing tire sizes.Why don't you just remove the gauge panels from both clusters, see how your resistor/fuses are established for your gear ratio and mimic that on your new cluster?