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1994 - 1998 Instrument Cluster Preventative Maintenance

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10K views 11 replies 9 participants last post by  Flade  
#1 · (Edited)
I repair a lot of SN95 instrument clusters for people and, these days, I am seeing a lot of failures due to age. One particular failure can be pretty catastrophic.

The instrument clusters in SN95 cars have been in service for about 25 years now and there is an Always-Hot power trace that goes to the speedometer in the cluster. That means that part of the speedometer circuit has been under constant power for 25 years minus the time you have had a dead or unhooked battery.

One of the components that is constantly powered is a surge suppression device called an MOV (Metal Oxide Varistor.) The MOV is designed to route any power surges it sees to ground, and to look like an open circuit at battery voltages. The MOV is the black disk show in this photo of the speedometer PCB:

Image

Unfortunately, when these MOVs fail due to old age, they usually short out straight to ground. The fuse for the Always-Hot circuit is too large to protect the instrument cluster. As a result, the Always-Hot PCB trace on the back of the instrument cluster burns out. Here is a photo of a typical burned trace (circled in green):
Image

Here is a closeup of the burned trace:
Image

I have also seen a couple of cases where the speedometer MOV has not completely failed, but has created a large current draw that will drain your battery. If you are seeing excessive current draw when your key is off, the speedometer is a likely culprit.

There are also MOVs in other modules of the SN95 instrument clusters, but they all are in switched power circuits, so they have not been powered up for nearly as many hours. I have not seen any of the other modules fail yet. But they are equally as old. It may make sense to replace all of the MOVs in your cluster.

The tachometer also has an MOV. Early SN95 clusters have fuel gauge anti-slosh modules in them, but they did not have an MOV in the circuit. However, all of the later fuel anti-slosh modules do have an MOV in them. Some SN95 cars also have an anti-slosh module in the low coolant light circuit. If your cluster is equipped with a low coolant anti-slosh module, it will also have an MOV surge suppressor.

I recommend that, at a minimum, you replace the speedometer MOV in your cluster to prevent a burned PBC trace. While you are at it, you could replace the 1 to 3 other MOVs in your cluster although the risk to those power traces is probably much lower.

You can replace the MOV with a new TDK B72210S0140K101 MOV. You will need to order this part from an electronics distributor such as Digikey. I recommend that you use a low wattage soldering iron so you don’t damage the PCB. You will also need to use a solder sucker to ensure that you have the PCB holes open and clean prior to soldering in the new MOV.

While you have the cluster out of the car, it is a good time to replace the odometer gears. The old original OEM gears have become very fragile with age and they will fail soon if they haven’t already. There are plenty of good videos on YouTube that can show you how to remove the instrument cluster from your car and how to replace the odometer gears. New odometer gears are also widely available on the internet. Here is a photo of how the gear normally breaks against the worm gear:
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While you have the instrument cluster out of the car, don’t drive it. The charging indicator circuit in the instrument cluster is part of the alternator circuit. Without the cluster in place, the alternator won’t charge the battery and you will be stranded when the battery dies if you drive the car.

Good luck with your instrument cluster and your preventative maintenance should you decide to undertake this project.
 
#3 · (Edited)
EDIT: I see that his trace has not failed yet and that his fuse did its job.. He can replace his MOV and his cluster will be fixed. For later readers with blown traces, here's how to fix it:

You can scrape some of the plastic coating off of both sides of that burned trace. Then, If you are really careful with a low wattage soldering iron, you can solder a jumper wire across the break in the trace. You will have to solder it fast to avoid melting the cluster case below the solder joint too badly. I then coat the wire with hot glue to protect it. If you also replace the MOV your cluster will work like new again.
 
#4 ·
Hey, thanks for the tip. I clipped one side of the MOV and pushed it over, then fixed the burned lead. The speedometer is working!!! And the battery is staying up. CHEERS. I had to sign up just to thank you. After a week of reading, just buy one on ebay. I wanted to know why it failed and if it could be fixed. Thank you.
 
#5 ·
Glad to help. Just be aware that cutting out the MOV without replacing it will leave your speedometer electronics vulnerable to any high voltage spike. The most common reason for a high voltage spike is a battery connection coming a little loose while the alternator is spinning and charging the battery. The current that was charging the battery can't stop instantaneously. It has to go somewhere which is into the electronics. That causes a high voltage spike. The MOV prevents that spike from getting to the speedo electronics.
 
#8 ·
Any way we can get a step by step on how to replace the MOV? I ordered the part from digi-key but I am not sure what to order just yet as far as a solder, desolder, pump, etc. nor on how to actually do it. I have never worked with a solder before but my speedo is out and I do not want to pay $1200 for a new electronic speedometer.
 
#9 ·
If you haven't soldered before, you should get some practice soldering PCBs before you work on something you don't want to screw up. I would recommend buying a "learn to solder" kit prior to working on your cluster. This one would probably work:


You will also want a solder sucker and some solder wick, 60/40 rosin core solder and flux:


Here's a good video on how to unsolder your components:

There are a million YouTube videos on how to solder through hole components to a PCB.

Solder some components to the PCB in the kit and then unsolder them and solder them back on again. Be careful not to overheat the pads and traces or they will lift off the PCB and then you have trouble.

When it comes time to fix your speedo, take the cluster cover off and remove the two minor gauge modules. Remove the speedotach module from the case and flip it up side down. That will protect the needles and give you a solid base to work on the speedo on.

If you look at the photos in the original post, you can see the MOV. Look for the MOV leads on the back side of the speedo PCB. Those will be the leads you need to unsolder. One of the leads is connected to a ground plane, which makes it harder to unsolder. Use flux for sure. Add a bit of solder first to make sure you have some lead in there. That will make it a little easier to unsolder.

It's a bit tricky to bend the leads and fish them through the 2 holes, but with a little futzing, it can be done. Bend the leads out a bit so gravity doesn't pull the MOV out again. then solder it in, clip off the leads and you are done.

Good luck