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S Chassis Technical discussion related to the S Chassis such as the S12, S13, S14, and S15. |
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02-18-2019, 02:58 PM | #1 |
How to fix your analog speedometer
If your analog S13 cluster speedometer doesnt work, and you don't have a bad speed sensor or wiring break from the sensor to the cluster, this might be what's wrong with the PCB
Bigger Picture: https://i.imgur.com/gqI5Tsf.jpg Note the missing capacitor in the group of 5 in this picture; that capacitor was the faulty one on one of the boards I had fixed, and removing it caused the speedometer to work again. I would recommend replacing the capacitor and not simply removing it. These capacitors seem to blow (some look like decoupling capacitors), which causes the signal to get all fucked up. I tested the caps with an ohmeter and it had really weird resistance values on some of them. Notably, if there's a cap that's discolored, it could be replaced or pulled with a high chance of fixing the board. I don't have a capacitance meter, but if you wanted to find the capacitance you'd have to pull the cap and figure that out. I would have done this if I had one, but had a spare donor board to pull caps off of, to make it work. I'd imagine the actual part that goes bad is probably easy to afford; they can't be any more than a few cents each. These clusters do not simply 'go bad' over time, and it's convenient that these surface mount caps are on this side of the PCB, which makes it easy to access as opposed to the other side. I'm sure the S14 might have similar problems in the future, because these things are getting older over the years. Don't throw out dead clusters; all this shit is fixable and it's SAD seeing them go for 100-250 freedom dollars on ebay. Here's a video of me bench testing the thing after fixing it. I don't expect everyone to have the tools and whatnot lying around to do/test this, but you can pull surface mount caps off a board using a butane torch with a hot air attachment. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qJAMsnTYuc Last edited by banandana; 02-18-2019 at 07:00 PM.. |
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02-18-2019, 03:30 PM | #3 |
No problem :3 It's sad seeing things of limited supply get thrown away like I've seen in some of the posts here. I wasn't able to find a solution so I tried to figure it out myself.
If you want to test the speedometer assembly, you can connect one of the speed sensor wires to a trace that connects to the SIG screw on the board, and the other wire for the speed sensor, to the ground pin. Giving the IGN screw 12 volts, grounding the GND screw, and spinning the speed sensor like I did in the video should be a good way to test the board. I was able to fix the 2 dead boards I had lying around by doing this and fiddling with the caps. It seems like a reoccurring thing, and an easy fix. ^^ |
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02-19-2019, 10:35 AM | #5 | |
Quote:
https://nicoclub.com/archives/how-to...-with-hud.html https://www.s-chassis.com/forums/gen...roblems-21741/ unless this is for the s14 or something |
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