Author Topic: Shift light  (Read 3897 times)

Offline 6PakFish

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Re: Shift light
« Reply #15 on: August 29, 2012 - 08:13:46 PM »
I think I saw where someone hooked up the seat belt warning light to illuminate at a desired RPM.   That would be pretty cool if you were keeping the stock looking interior.

I was thinking of the same spot. I ordered a rpm activated switch so I can use any light I want. :clueless:




Offline 6PakFish

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Re: Shift light
« Reply #16 on: May 26, 2013 - 11:25:23 PM »
Well I finally got it all back together. The tach was slow and 500 to 1000 rpm off. I took it all apart again and removed the tension screw in the back of the tach under the board. Had to unsolder my connections to get to it but well worth the time. I soaked it for 24 hours adding a couple of drops of sewing machine oil every few hours. put it all back together and now it works perfect. Quicker response than my digital tach on my timing light. The clock works great and hasn't lost any time in the four weeks since I installed it. The only bad is I didn't have enough carbon fiber wrap to get to all line up but that's a minor detail. I also refinished my dash, console, door, and rear panels with Alsa soft touch top coat. Pretty cool stuff. It has different texture depending on how you reduce it. It feels like soft leather. $200 bucks for two quarts sprayable but a hell of a lot less than new panels. Dang I should've dusted it off before I snapped the pix.

Offline Sp33dyF1sh

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Re: Shift light
« Reply #17 on: June 28, 2014 - 06:25:23 AM »

Well I finally got it all back together. The tach was slow and 500 to 1000 rpm off. I took it all apart again and removed the tension screw in the back of the tach under the board. Had to unsolder my connections to get to it but well worth the time. I soaked it for 24 hours adding a couple of drops of sewing machine oil every few hours. put it all back together and now it works perfect. Quicker response than my digital tach on my timing light. The clock works great and hasn't lost any time in the four weeks since I installed it. The only bad is I didn't have enough carbon fiber wrap to get to all line up but that's a minor detail. I also refinished my dash, console, door, and rear panels with Alsa soft touch top coat. Pretty cool stuff. It has different texture depending on how you reduce it. It feels like soft leather. $200 bucks for two quarts sprayable but a hell of a lot less than new panels. Dang I should've dusted it off before I snapped the pix.

I like how u did this, very modern yet still retro at the same time... I'd like to do something similar but add run/start switches.....


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