75gmck25
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2016
- Posts
- 2,266
- Reaction score
- 2,207
- Location
- Northern Virginia
- First Name
- Bruce
- Truck Year
- 1975
- Truck Model
- K25 Camper Special TH350 NP203
- Engine Size
- 5.7
How comfortable are you with simple troubleshooting of wiring? Some guys who have the skills to rebuild an engine or transmission could not find a short in the wiring or bad connector if someone helped and spray painted it orange for them.
If you find a junkyard cluster from the same vintage, in good condition, the swap should be easy. You swap the cluster, swap the oil and temp senders, and it should work. In general, your truck was factory pre-wired for both gauge and non-gauge options.
- clusters can be grouped by years and you need the right group. For example, my ‘75 has a mechanical oil pressure and an ammeter. Later gauges had electrical oil and voltage gauges. I’m not sure of the range that would match your truck.
- sending units in the 70’s changed in the resistance “profile” over the years. If you get the wrong one it will work but your gauge will be consistently high or low. It took me 3 tries to get one that shows about 3/8 scale at about 190 degrees, because the original OEM ‘75 sensor from GM is no longer stocked in most stores.
- the old cluster plastic is brittle and may have been manhandled by the PO. Cracked mounting tabs and other issues are common.
If you find a junkyard cluster from the same vintage, in good condition, the swap should be easy. You swap the cluster, swap the oil and temp senders, and it should work. In general, your truck was factory pre-wired for both gauge and non-gauge options.
- clusters can be grouped by years and you need the right group. For example, my ‘75 has a mechanical oil pressure and an ammeter. Later gauges had electrical oil and voltage gauges. I’m not sure of the range that would match your truck.
- sending units in the 70’s changed in the resistance “profile” over the years. If you get the wrong one it will work but your gauge will be consistently high or low. It took me 3 tries to get one that shows about 3/8 scale at about 190 degrees, because the original OEM ‘75 sensor from GM is no longer stocked in most stores.
- the old cluster plastic is brittle and may have been manhandled by the PO. Cracked mounting tabs and other issues are common.