IS250 Dashboard/Door Panel Restoration with Custom Gauge Pod
#34
Any final shots of the completed dash in the car? Also, in your LS1 swap thread you never indicated how your cluster worked? Were you able to figure out the wiring or did you install custom gauges?
Amazing work throughout and thank you for the documentation. It really is an awesome build.
Great work.
Amazing work throughout and thank you for the documentation. It really is an awesome build.
Great work.
#35
Any final shots of the completed dash in the car? Also, in your LS1 swap thread you never indicated how your cluster worked? Were you able to figure out the wiring or did you install custom gauges?
Amazing work throughout and thank you for the documentation. It really is an awesome build.
Great work.
Amazing work throughout and thank you for the documentation. It really is an awesome build.
Great work.
I was able to get pretty much my entire gauge cluster working. I stuck satin black vinyl over all the warning lights from the features I removed (ABS, ESC, Check Engine, etc...) so it looks pretty clean. My tach is off a little but I found a company that makes a signal conversion module to correct the tach. Apparently it's a spark timing so it's off by 25%, the difference between the number of cylinders in the stock V6 to my V8. In the guage cluster I have oil pressure and water temp and a third hole in the middle (which is covered with vinyl) which I will eventually install a Holley EFI gauge hat can scroll through all my ECU parameters.
#39
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Looking great!
Nice work! I just purchased an 07 with sticky dash and door panel issue and I'm planning on the same exact restoration minus the pod. I also want to do the door panels that are melting and sticky as well and was hoping you or someone could shed some light on weather or not the top piece of the door panels that get sticky can be removed and weather or not they can be shaved down in a similar matter as you did with the dash. Any insight would be great. Thanks.
#40
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So here is a semi-complete picture of the installed dash. I covered all the dash trim pieces including the gauge pod with 3M Dinoc carbon fiber. I still have the a/c vent bezel to go but I am not crazy about the final result. It might just be the color of the suede which seems a little mis-matched with the carbon fiber but I am thinking about removing it and going solid color with all the trim pieces.
I was able to get pretty much my entire gauge cluster working. I stuck satin black vinyl over all the warning lights from the features I removed (ABS, ESC, Check Engine, etc...) so it looks pretty clean. My tach is off a little but I found a company that makes a signal conversion module to correct the tach. Apparently it's a spark timing so it's off by 25%, the difference between the number of cylinders in the stock V6 to my V8. In the guage cluster I have oil pressure and water temp and a third hole in the middle (which is covered with vinyl) which I will eventually install a Holley EFI gauge hat can scroll through all my ECU parameters.
I was able to get pretty much my entire gauge cluster working. I stuck satin black vinyl over all the warning lights from the features I removed (ABS, ESC, Check Engine, etc...) so it looks pretty clean. My tach is off a little but I found a company that makes a signal conversion module to correct the tach. Apparently it's a spark timing so it's off by 25%, the difference between the number of cylinders in the stock V6 to my V8. In the guage cluster I have oil pressure and water temp and a third hole in the middle (which is covered with vinyl) which I will eventually install a Holley EFI gauge hat can scroll through all my ECU parameters.
great work
#41
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Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: CA
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So here is a semi-complete picture of the installed dash. I covered all the dash trim pieces including the gauge pod with 3M Dinoc carbon fiber. I still have the a/c vent bezel to go but I am not crazy about the final result. It might just be the color of the suede which seems a little mis-matched with the carbon fiber but I am thinking about removing it and going solid color with all the trim pieces.
I was able to get pretty much my entire gauge cluster working. I stuck satin black vinyl over all the warning lights from the features I removed (ABS, ESC, Check Engine, etc...) so it looks pretty clean. My tach is off a little but I found a company that makes a signal conversion module to correct the tach. Apparently it's a spark timing so it's off by 25%, the difference between the number of cylinders in the stock V6 to my V8. In the guage cluster I have oil pressure and water temp and a third hole in the middle (which is covered with vinyl) which I will eventually install a Holley EFI gauge hat can scroll through all my ECU parameters.
I was able to get pretty much my entire gauge cluster working. I stuck satin black vinyl over all the warning lights from the features I removed (ABS, ESC, Check Engine, etc...) so it looks pretty clean. My tach is off a little but I found a company that makes a signal conversion module to correct the tach. Apparently it's a spark timing so it's off by 25%, the difference between the number of cylinders in the stock V6 to my V8. In the guage cluster I have oil pressure and water temp and a third hole in the middle (which is covered with vinyl) which I will eventually install a Holley EFI gauge hat can scroll through all my ECU parameters.
(Sorry for the necro-post, but I'm new around here for the IS)
#42
Driver School Candidate
The dash and door handles are literally coming apart and this does build thread does cheer me up somewhat! I can scrape the melting surface off but I have no idea how to lay on a new suede or vinyl surface. Even cardboard is better than a shiny glaring melted dashboard I have now!
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