You have to take the entire drivers side dash off. Take off the kick panel, the dash trim sometimes looks like wood grain, dash besel, finaly the gauge cluster.
have an experience mechanic test you fuel pump fuel level sensor, which is part of the fuel pump, ground the wires and if the gauge pecks gauge is good. if it don't you have to replace your cluster which is a seal item and must be replaced as a unit. do not try this yourself.
instrument cluster needs to come out and apart to gain access and replace gauge
A Buick with a 3.8 liter engine does not have an oil pressure switch. There is an oil pressure gauge. The gauge can be accessed by removing the dashboard panel. Unhook the wiring harness to the gauge. Reverse the process to replace the gauge.
Buy a new Speedometer cluster. The external Temp gauge is extremely rare
If it is the gauge you have to pull the gauge cluster. If it is the cable you have to get under the car and replace it. It will be the only cable on the tranny. Good luck
when that happens you usually just have to replace the instrument cluster when that happens you usually just have to replace the instrument cluster when that happens you usually just have to replace the instrument cluster
Remove the instrument cluster and replace the resistors on the circuit board. You can get them from radio shack, an it's not hard to do. While you are in there, I would recommend replacing all bulbs and stepper motors to your gauge needles so you won't ever have to take the cluster out again.
get a new sending unit i had the same problem
The gauge is part of the instument cluster ( the part with the speedometer ).The gauge is part of the instument cluster ( the part with the speedometer ).
There is no reset button for the fuel gauge. Something is either wrong with the gauge or the sending unit in the tank.
1. remove the entire dash board 2. remove the instrument cluster 3. change bulb
Usually, 'cluster', refers to the instrument/gauge cluster or instrument/gauge panel that the driver looks at, containing the speedometer, fuel gauge, etc.