Jump to content

US Dashworks Aftermarket Gauge Faces Installed


nay327

Recommended Posts

Posted

Even though I’ve been on the forums for a little while, I’m still relatively new when it comes to posting so forgive me if I post in the wrong place/section. But I recently bought a set of aftermarket gauge faces from US Dashworks here on the forums for my 2016 Silverado 1500. At a heck of a deal of $100 all together(which is crazy cheap especially when you compare their prices to the other guys) and I installed them myself. I’m barely 20, and I have absolutely zero experience with gauge faces or anything electrical for that matter. So, needless to say I was scared to take this on myself, but i still gave it a shot. It only took me about an hour to install and dial in the needles! The whole process was a lot easier than what I thought it was going to be, but that probably has a lot to do with the help and advice I got from Carl, who has helped me and kept me informed and updated throughout the whole process. Everything has been an extremely pleasant process, from talking to him about the backlighting all the way to his help with the finishing touches. Anyways I know you guys want to see pictures so I’ll get to posting!

 

IMG_0509.HEIC

Here is my cluster after I removed it

 

IMG_0511.HEIC

After I got the new faces/needles in

 

IMG_0513.HEIC

First start up back together, it’s still kind of bright out so you don’t get the full effect

 

IMG_0519.HEIC

And here’s a picture of it tonight in the dark

 

I’ve had an awesome experience dealing with the Guys at US Dashworks and can’t wait to do even more business with them!

 

 

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted
Photos won’t load
How about now?

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk




Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Posted

Wow....looks amazing


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk



Thank you! I was so nervous before I started but once I opened everything up and got some help and tips from Carl at uS Dashworks I seen it was almost fool proof


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Posted

Im glad you like them, these forum members are great! you guys have cleaned us out, we only have 2 more sets left. We have more on the way, and about 5 more colors to choose from too! OH and a new design, I am working on it right now. The design will pay tribute to the classic Silverado super sport.

Posted
4 minutes ago, Jmiller11331 said:

What do all the different needles look like? Any photos?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

we have premium blue, premium white, and premium red, the blue and white unfortunately require an LED swap, which consists of you sending in your cluster and ill do the whole conversion for you. pictures will be up on the forum, and the website tomarrow.

Posted
Im glad you like them, these forum members are great! you guys have cleaned us out, we only have 2 more sets left. We have more on the way, and about 5 more colors to choose from too! OH and a new design, I am working on it right now. The design will pay tribute to the classic Silverado super sport.


You’re tempting me already! I can’t wait to see what they look like!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • I wonder what the price is out at the coast, Big Sur or other out of the way locations as I bet they are charging quite a premium over the in land pumps. 
    • Were you looking at the HD trucks on the GM website or the half tons as that makes all the difference. As far as I know there are only two options for the HD trucks and that is the standard 2 speed transfer case or the 2 speed transfer case that has the added 4 high auto feature and they put that transfer case by default into the LTZ and High Country although its optional in the LT and not sure if its available in the work trucks.    The half tons, that is where its been a total mess in my estimation for a few years now with most trucks below the top trim having the single speed transfer case as standard but with the option of having the two speed such as one would get by choosing the Z71 package, however then not being able to get the two speed transfer case with the towing package unless it was a higher trim truck AND had the 6.2 gas so one could combine the towing package gearing diffs with the two speed transfer case. Having said that if its a trail boss package then it gets the two speed transfer case but not necessarily able to get the tow package as it would depend on trim level and engine chosen. Believe me, people have bought the GM half tons assuming "of course it will have a two speed transfer case" only to find out after when they really pay attention to what they now own .... crap, there is NO low range !.    I don't believe Ford or Ram have gone that way yet with their half tons but like I say its been a few years now that GM has done this with the half tons. 
    • $5.19 for regular...
    • My office is slowly filling with Blazer parts. Getting ready to do the big bang of repairs. Intake (second time), water pump, radiator, hoses, and I'm going to re-seal the timing cover where someone went hog wild with silicone. Might as well, because I don't think that's done right.   There's a local tow yard that I didn't realize also has quite the inventory of junk vehicles. This is an old school junkyard. No waivers. Cash only, you were never here if anyone asks. Don't piss off the owner, or you'll end up in the back of one of those cars, headed for the shredder. And if you see something, don't snitch. Cars stacked double high, wasps nests, trip hazards and junk everywhere. I found a few little odds/ends for my Blazer. The $20 I spent was worth the experience alone. But I was never there. What yard?   I officially love/hate this truck. It's so out of my wheelhouse, roughest vehicle I've ever owned. Every. single. repair. -is so hard-fought, everything that can go wrong, goes wrong. Currently in a hate phase, and kind of wish I was closer to sending it down the road with a lucky new owner, to be honest. Preparing for the day when I tear into this thing...lots of pre-funk with Ibuprofen.   Rock Auto sent me a bad reman rear wiper motor. It was a bear to install. The tailgate in these things has about eleventy-billion fastners and pieces and things that need to be uninstalled/moved just to access the shoddy rear wiper motor. The casing on mine was cracked clean through, btw. Nice, GM, nice. SO I got this new motor installed, hit the switch, I see it wig-wag (without the arm installed) and think I'm golden. Reassemble everything. With the wiper arm installed I gave it one final test. Time to clean up and take the other half out to dinner, collect a paycheck, right?   Nope. I hear the plastic worm gear stripping as the arm hung up. Just like my broken motor. Weak/old and shredding itself internally. I can assist the arm and the range of motion is normal, and it parks correctly. It just doesn't have the poop to actually sweep the arm with a blade on it. Oh, hell. Turned the key off and shut the shop door behind me. I get to do that over again, too.
    • A complete delete is the most thorough mechanical solution, but it is also major engine work. On a quiet truck that is still under extended warranty, opening the engine purely as prevention is difficult to justify. A plug-in disabler stops commanded cylinder deactivation, but it does not remove or repair the collapsible lifters, so it should not be treated as failure insurance. I would keep the oil full, document the maintenance, and have any persistent tick, misfire, or loss of power diagnosed promptly. If the engine eventually has to come apart, that is the logical time to compare an OEM-style repair with a complete delete. The right choice depends on the truck’s symptoms, warranty status, expected ownership period, and whether the engine already needs to be opened. We explain that decision in more detail here—full disclosure, this is our own guide: https://www.bluev8.com/blogs/news/do-you-actually-need-an-afm-disabler   One exception: some 2021 L82/L84 trucks have RPO YK9, meaning cylinder deactivation was already disabled in the factory ECM; on those trucks a plug-in disabler is redundant, although the AFM/DFM hardware remains inside the engine.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...