Some good news today, I managed to source a Diesel tachometer from a Jetta. Had some time to fiddle and test it with the latest PCB prototype this week and although it's not a perfect fit, it works!
I may have a go at swapping over the PCB from the Jetta tachometer into the T3 tachometer I have. If it works I should have a functioning factory tachometer on my T3.
I made some more progress this week. The factory petrol tachometer has now been converted to work with my diesel van. The red line is different, but the revs seem to match my aftermarket tach very closely.
Also, I felt bad about taking apart my Jetta tachometer, so I decided to try out these tachometer PCB's I had made. Turns out they work! I've also figured out how to bench test them with a signal generator now too, which makes calibrating them much easier.
I still have some more ideas/changes I would like to make, but I'm pretty happy with the progress.
If of interest I have found the booklet that came with the CJH design I bought a few years back. I could scan it and send. Not sure of CJH IP though.
Anyway, the offers there if needed.
I colour code my pcb's based on lifecycle. Although I can't remember the sequence it's on my office monitor. Never use white as it screws with the silk screen and capacitors end up inverted.
A new dashboard or revamped /renewed circuitry is on my hit list, the ribbon on the rear of mine is quite tatty, it is working ok though for now, however, if in the future I see a recommended fix I would be interested as I honestly couldn't try myself as I know I would mess it up, through the years on this form I have seen the odd post covering this, but as I say, some people fix it themselves, would only try it if it was a simple plug in. The photo below looks like its like that, but as I say mine does work (for now).Hope yours is good now?
Petrol, 1900 cc Automatic, 1985 High top Autosleeper.