Hey @Nicksacco and @MountainMeadows Nick, I didn’t get around to responding to your message from yesterday mostly because I've been trying to figure out where I want to go with this.Cisco, you have inadvertently fallen into "the creative wiring zone"!
But it appears you've gotten most of it figured out in spite of "the zone".
Maybe I've missed it, but wanted to mention the front axle. Definitely give it a check for oil/condition of oil there.
I drained about a cup from each side during my restoration and it was thick and black. Lucky I was that this lack of care didn't ruin the guts of the axle. As I recall, every seal on the thing was useless.
As for the dash, whatever you do, don't try solder on the circuit board. Those copper tabs on the light sockets don't look too bad from here - are they corroded and broken off? Is the plastic toast?
I was wondering if you could add a drop of solder with a needle tip iron to the socket's circuit board contacts? Then you could file the drop down to adjust tightness. Also, add a bit of dielectric grease.
As for the multi-pin socket - what is the condition of the contacts? can you bend them back to be tighter around the pins? Is there some kind of bracket that holds the socket to the board? It appears that there is the ole' typical "bend a piece of metal around the wire" thing. Well better than nothing - add some heat shrink to it
Curious to know what you find on the tank gauge. Hopefully the sensor is fine and just gunked up. Sometimes the float sinks! I'm always surprised during this discovery phase!
View attachment 88949
View attachment 88950
Those are some good suggestions on gauge repair, guys, thank you.
To be honest, I'm not totally sure anything in the cluster is broken except the pointers. Coolant gauge seems to work. Tach, and hour meter work. The fuel gauge itself may work, I just wont know til I either get a potentiometer or a fuel sending unit that functions. I forgot to mention last night that the sending unit sweep arm is messed up, has a hole in it, and will need to be replaced. I have a candidate.
The dash connections are a bugger...but it turns out the plug connections are just snap in, and will release the wires to clean up and tighten up that connection.
They dont even look corroded really. If I can get these tightened up slightly, then we should be good on the plug connections. I'll mic the pin diameter and see what size the connectors need to be.
@MountainMeadows I really like those connection cleaning sets.
As for the lights, I found out what the twist in connectors are, and will buy a new set of 10, they are about 70 cents a piece. That will be way better than trying to clean the existing ones. paired with some LED dash lights (most of the current bulbs are burnt out), we might be in good shape.
I took the dash apart today, to clean it. I was surprised I could disassemble the entire thing. I guess this was made before they started gluing everything together.
The lens was cut badly at fabrication I guess, there's a slight gap in the bottom corner and thats where the water intrusion you see came from. Surprisingly the board looks fine.
You are right about the needles. Since I can get all this apart, replacing the needles would be easy. I gently pulled on one to see if it would come off. It didnt. I barely pulled on it because I didnt want to break it, and I am good at breaking delicate things. Did you take your gauge needles off? Any trick to it?
Thanks!