Mystery Tachometer

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ButchM

Junior Member
Joined
Oct 19, 2023
Posts
22
Reaction score
26
Location
Idaho
First Name
Butch
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
K30
Engine Size
454
Hi everyone, after a ridiculous amount of online research and coming up with absolutely nothing I decided to join a forum and hope that someone else has seen this gauge before. So I'm in the process of "restoring" my 1986 Chevy K10 Scottsdale, after 8 long years I've finally found the time to install the engine I rebuilt 5 years ago and the transmission I rebuilt 2 years ago. The truck now runs and drives and to my surprise all of the factory gauges actually work, they just needed to be hooked up to sending units. I've got the voltmeter, temp, oil pressure, clock, and fuel gauge working and I have my eye on the factory tach now.

This tachometer has the fuel gauge built into it, I can't find anything about this gauge anywhere, it's like it doesn't exist. Every gauge cluster I've ever seen either has the large fuel gauge next to the speedometer or they have a single tachometer and a small fuel gauge where the clock is. I haven't actually pulled the cluster yet to see how the tach is wired, for now I'm just super curious as to where this gauge came from.

Also, this truck has the body of a 1986 C10 and the frame/drivetrain of a 1975 K10 but these gauges look like the 1980s style to me.

(sorry for the crappy pictures, it's a pretty sunny day)

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Pete
You have a hybrid/Frankendash. The clock is an option (don't have the option code) for "regular" pickups (C/K10-30). The tach you have is from a C50/C60 series medium duty truck with a 366 or 427 engine with air brakes. On those trucks there was an air pressure gauge where your clock is. The 5000 rpm top end is a clue, those engines had a much lower redline due to the heavier piston weight.
I have one of those tachs I plan to install in my truck.
As a side note: I was told by an old Chevy mechanic that the trucks that came from the factory with an air compressor (all air brake trucks) had forged steel crankshafts. May be a good source for that forged 427 crank at a cheap price.
Butch
 

frickenbored

Junior Member
Joined
Oct 27, 2024
Posts
3
Reaction score
4
Location
Michigan
First Name
Pete
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
Scottsdale K10
Engine Size
5.7L
Pete
You have a hybrid/Frankendash. The clock is an option (don't have the option code) for "regular" pickups (C/K10-30). The tach you have is from a C50/C60 series medium duty truck with a 366 or 427 engine with air brakes. On those trucks there was an air pressure gauge where your clock is. The 5000 rpm top end is a clue, those engines had a much lower redline due to the heavier piston weight.
I have one of those tachs I plan to install in my truck.
As a side note: I was told by an old Chevy mechanic that the trucks that came from the factory with an air compressor (all air brake trucks) had forged steel crankshafts. May be a good source for that forged 427 crank at a cheap price.
Butch

Yeah, this doesn't surprise me. The whole truck is Frankensteind together by the previous owner, now I'm doing my best to un-Frankenstein it. Hopefully I can pull the cluster this weekend and find out how that tach hooks up; however, I'm doubting it will play nice with my MSD 6AL box, but I should at least see it do something. I plan to ditch the MSD ignition soon in favor of a Progression Ignition digitally programmable HEI distributor anyway.
 

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