Yes , John , - adjustment fairly easy — but you have to dissemble whole dome thing to get at it . Some comment to help. Looks worse than it is . ( see FSM to get dome out ) But you can leave the speedo assembly itself in its metal back can . And all gauges in place on silver plastic piece . After parting at 4screws at top of dome ,two long ones underneath holding metal ( maybe)— get speedo out . Take off bottom black plastic piece attached to speedo can , where the needle pivots . Use screw driver blade to pry back under the push on gauge wires to gauge housings , if you have to do that — do not just pull on them . Have not done in a car . Good always to do that or you can loosen or pull off flag terminals . The clock spring suspension end of the needle Is anchored to a post like thing that rotates around center hole like clock hands .
Spin input with drill , note reading . Say you know it is off like ten mph . That is like say distance from 1 to 2 pm on a clock , so very carefully move it ( post and Mount ) about that much clockwise (!loosens spring force) run drill again see how much more it reads etc Till it reads 10 more . Do not distort clock spring. I am going to buy non contact tach , cheap , 25 bucks, put white tape stripe on drill , get to bottom of this . If 1000 is 60 , real rpm of drill will scale to some mph . Tach will give real speed 1-2 % . Thinking about the scraping issue — since yesterday — (Common once cup is bent , or even unbent — fiendishly hard to get just right again) I am thinking maybe to space out the face of speedo and cup ( goes with it) by two washers . Scrape is related to in and out motion or end play of input drive , too, as magnets mount to that —spin close to cup — just too close in there unless perfect tolerance .—- i think design / tolerance flaw —-,axially too close . The one in question shows evidence of scrape on and off for thousands of miles ( that is where needle jumps up occasionally— aggravating) . Have seen that on a lot on these . Be careful not to handle it in a way that presses or rests on aluminum cup . It projects out of bottom once out of back can . Very fragile . Easy to grab it , with hand (!)! =‘slightly ‘ bending arm holding cup . I realized after that, I can position input shaft so it covers up cup there — . Protects it . You do not get into it that deep — ,takes full disassembly to hurt it (!) - but FYI When putting dome back do not over tighten screws . Easy to break off ears ; I have been putting flat washers there Careful, even tapping can to 6-32 . Washers Have to fit in recess , # 6 SS seem ok. While there put Mobil one in oil inlet fitting on the thread in back . Sometimes a brass cap you pry out , sometimes a screw knob . It will not harden up . Do a few times .. Hope that helps .. good luck John !
Sent from my iPhone not by choice
Posted by: John Grady <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx or go to https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/all/manage/edit For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm For archives go to http://www.forwardlook.net/300-archive/search.htm#querylang __,_._,___ |