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Electrical bulb question re: gauge illimination

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Evans Ward

Love those LC2/ Y56 cars!
Joined
May 24, 2001
Messages
2,060
My VDO gauges in my T-Top gauge pod are too bright for me when illuminated/ lights on and I want to "tone" them down some. When I dim the switch at instrument panel, it helps but then it's hard to read the speedo cluster. Can I place lower wattage bulbs in the overhead gauges without risk to potential electrical problems? I think the bulb wattage standard in these is 2wt and was thinking of going down to 1wt ones. The other options I believe to dimming them would be blackening the bulb surfaces some with a black marker or going the bulb cover route. On the bulb covers, does anyone know of any clear ones available? I don't want the ricer look of colored ones. Thanks for any and all assistance here! :)
 
No problem using a lower wattage bulb if you can find it.

Another thing that might work, try to wire the two gauge bulbs in series.
 
Black 33+ scotch electrical tape would work too.

Check the bulb temp. first, if it ain't red hot it will work just fine. :cool:

Or an LED of proper MCD output replacement soldered in place of the VDO bulb.
 
Thanks for the tech help here guys. I'll take a look at this soon hopefully! :cool:
 
161 type bulb used was/ is 2.6 watts. Could not locate a lower wattage 161 bulb than 2.6. Verified that the overhead gauges were also wired in series. From a web search, I used a black sharpie marker to shade the bulb(s) black. This helps alot! The light will still shine through the black marker ink. If this doesn't put them at the level I want, I may experiment with other paint and techniques.
 
ive colored aftermarket bulbs iwth a black sharpie to dim them down
*note a sharpie does apply like paint
apply it and let it dry check it if ya want more go over it again ect ect

-dan
 
It can be done but you need a power resistor or a rheostat, low ohmage to do it.

High current capacity and wattage is needed depending upon the bulb load.

A 1 ohm 50 watt resistor dims pretty well, about 25%, for 4-6 gauges.

Surplus stuff is the way to go as they are expensive new, pennies on the dollar for that stuff at parts places local or online.

Or dig one out of a junk car somewhere. :)

Then again a sharpie or black tape is rather easy too. :biggrin:
 
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