02-15-2011, 01:44 PM
as a part of my stereo swap (see separate thread) i needed to relocate the gauges that were below my deck, as the new deck is a double DIN and the old one was a single, and the gauges lived below it
the problem was where the heck to locate the gauges without it looking like some rice grinder / kid's car - the 2" round gauges were really creating a problem - the A pillar was therefore out of the question due to the aforementioned aesthetics problem - column mounting meant putting something there that blocked my view of the rest of the cluster, and also putting something fairly bright in my face, and i already have glare issues - there was really no place else on the dash, and there was no room in the cluster - i had to start thinking outside the box - the gauges were oil temp, vacuum/boost, and a clock
the clock i can live without, as there is one in the deck
the oil temp i resolved by utilizing a different type of gauge and relocating it (pic to follow)
the vacuum/boost gauge though was a problem - there just wasn't any place to put a round gauge, and another square one didn't really work either
then i starting thinking about the 951 - it already had a boost gauge on it - i wondered if i could make it work in the 968 - so i picked one up from 968TDG, who also had a similar idea - i then went about changing the face to read like i wanted, and had the unit calibrated - it needed a signal sent to it, and there is no KLR in the 968, so i installed a 2 bar MAP sensor to drive the gauge - i tracked down which pins in the instrument cluster connector to attach to, and then i installed it - bummer - no reading
ok - let's bypass the pins and go directly to the posts - still no signal
verify MAP signal - got it - connect directly to gauge - got it - cool, right?
wrong! now, while it reads correctly when hooked up independently, as soon as i connect the center instrument cluster connector, it pegs the gauge to the right - clearly it is picking up voltage elsewhere (likely the tach circuit) and pegging the gauge
i know the gauge itself will work - so, i thought i would disconnect the gauge from the 951 unit, mount it in the 968 unit, and swap out the face plate - simple, right? hold on there little buckeroo!
as it turns out, the boost gauge runs its signal through an IC on the 951 tach circuit board to calibrate the signal - crap! now what?
i am now going to do as i indicated, except i am also going to extend the 951 tach assembly away from the boost gauge and have it hanging behind the instrument cluster like a colostomy bag - that way, i can still mount the boost gauge in the 968 tach assembly, use the new face plate, and have the 968 tach and the 951 boost gauge in the same assembly
what a nightmare
i should have this running in about an hour - i'll post pics as soon as i do
the problem was where the heck to locate the gauges without it looking like some rice grinder / kid's car - the 2" round gauges were really creating a problem - the A pillar was therefore out of the question due to the aforementioned aesthetics problem - column mounting meant putting something there that blocked my view of the rest of the cluster, and also putting something fairly bright in my face, and i already have glare issues - there was really no place else on the dash, and there was no room in the cluster - i had to start thinking outside the box - the gauges were oil temp, vacuum/boost, and a clock
the clock i can live without, as there is one in the deck
the oil temp i resolved by utilizing a different type of gauge and relocating it (pic to follow)
the vacuum/boost gauge though was a problem - there just wasn't any place to put a round gauge, and another square one didn't really work either
then i starting thinking about the 951 - it already had a boost gauge on it - i wondered if i could make it work in the 968 - so i picked one up from 968TDG, who also had a similar idea - i then went about changing the face to read like i wanted, and had the unit calibrated - it needed a signal sent to it, and there is no KLR in the 968, so i installed a 2 bar MAP sensor to drive the gauge - i tracked down which pins in the instrument cluster connector to attach to, and then i installed it - bummer - no reading
ok - let's bypass the pins and go directly to the posts - still no signal
verify MAP signal - got it - connect directly to gauge - got it - cool, right?
wrong! now, while it reads correctly when hooked up independently, as soon as i connect the center instrument cluster connector, it pegs the gauge to the right - clearly it is picking up voltage elsewhere (likely the tach circuit) and pegging the gauge
i know the gauge itself will work - so, i thought i would disconnect the gauge from the 951 unit, mount it in the 968 unit, and swap out the face plate - simple, right? hold on there little buckeroo!
as it turns out, the boost gauge runs its signal through an IC on the 951 tach circuit board to calibrate the signal - crap! now what?
i am now going to do as i indicated, except i am also going to extend the 951 tach assembly away from the boost gauge and have it hanging behind the instrument cluster like a colostomy bag - that way, i can still mount the boost gauge in the 968 tach assembly, use the new face plate, and have the 968 tach and the 951 boost gauge in the same assembly
what a nightmare
i should have this running in about an hour - i'll post pics as soon as i do
94 Midnight Metallic Blue Cab Porsche 968 w/deviating cashmere/black interior and WAY too many mods to list - thanks to eric for creating www.968forums.com
"It isn't nearly as expensive to do it right as it is to do it wrong."
(This post was last modified: 02-15-2011, 02:01 PM by flash.)

