That's interesting. When I bought my panel and gauges, the panel was anodized black and just slightly smaller than the stock one, so it was much easier (and less finicky) to install. No modifications were needed. Sounds as though things have changed.I had the Speedhuts in a car I purchased. Did not like how the fascia had to be user-modified to fit. And I had their speedometer go bad.
I went back to stock.
I did the exact same thing, had Rich order them to look as close to the original as possible. I have the originals packed away, they were working perfectly when removed. I miss the flat-bottomed tach as well!!!I had Rich Brooks replace my working factory gauges with SpeedHuts, just to preserve my originals. I've been pretty satisfied with them. My biggest gripe is that I miss the original flat-bottomed tach! Looked so much cooler.
That's interesting. When I bought my panel and gauges, the panel was anodized black.
You'll never put the panel back in. You'll never sell the car. May as well sell it to an amateur hoarder like me.I installed my Speedhut full panel about 5 years ago. Metal panel was powder coated. I have not had any gauge problems or problems with the panel finish in that time. And I’ve probably put more miles on them than anyone else. Not to say that 2112 or others haven’t had some problems, but my experience has been 100% so far.
Ditto on the observation that the Speedhut panel is slightly smaller, which makes it much easier to get in and out than the OE panel. It also doesn’t have sharp edges, which gouge your fingers as well as the binnacle when taking them out (unless you use lots of tape to protect the binnacle, which then makes it even harder to get out). The original panel is sealed away in plastic for the (hopefully) distant day that someone else inherits my car and might actually want them.