After cleaning up the windshield pinch weld on my K20 and hitting it with a coat of spray paint (in an attempt to keep Minnesota rust at bay behind a new windshield gasket), I still had some free time in the garage. Instead of drinking more beer, I decided to install the tach.
I decided to go low with it, mimicking the position of the tach in my Monte, just to have it as "out of the way" as possible. It's high and right enough where my right foot should never catch it while operating or going for the throttle. It's also left and far enough forward where someone riding in the middle of the bench should never bother it, even when riding with a left foot on the hump to the left of the 4wd shifter. The wiring is also nicely tucked out of the way under the dash. I think the exposed wiring is ultimately what deterred me from the dash screw mounting position.
The picture below is taken as I view the dash while driving with the tilt wheel all the way down and the wheels straight. My steering wheel rides off center (been like that since I bought the truck) which conveniently un-obstructs the tach. Even if I fix the steering wheel, or the tach becomes otherwise obstructed, I'll probably leave it be. I don't drive the truck like a race car, it has an automatic transmission, and I generally just use the tach for periodic reference.
Lastly, this old tach was given to me by a coworker a few years ago. He was cleaning out his garage in preparation to move, and he found this tach in a box with a few other gauges (voltmeter, oil pressure, and a temp gauge) that had been sitting around for decades. Knowing I was a Chevy guy at work, he brought the box in for me. He had taken the gauges out of his Chevelle before he sold it, and he figured I may be able to use them in one of my old Chevys. Now the tach has new life in my K20, which makes it that much cooler!
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