I've been building a new cockpit this past winter. One task I just completed, was a new engine panel. Mine was original from 1961, starting with a Graymarine gasoline engine. Now 3 engines later, it's dog-eared and doesn't make a lot of sense.
Once I pulled the old panel out, I decided it was high time to deal with 20 extra feet of engine wiring harness they left coiled and stuffed behind - presumably when the first diesel was installed - in 1974. It was liberating taking wire cutters to that plug of wires. By the time I made that snip, I had removed the old instruments, switches, etc, and had sorted out what was going on (you can see why I've been building a new cockpit).
I built a new engine panel - a little bigger, a little deeper, out of a scrap of Lexan, the back lightly sanded and simply painted black.
A little elbow grease and a 3M pad brought the old gauges and switches back to life. I rewired everything in the new panel, from scratch. That was easy to do on a bench compared to in the boat.
Still a little archaic (the amp meters are the full flow type - which I'll replace in the future) - but improved. Once I lower the new cockpit into the boat in a couple weeks, I'll reconnect the wires(easy now).
The new panel is a big improvement.
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