Speedometer cable lubricate or R&R

grahame

New Member
May 6, 2006
10
0
0
I am getting ready to pull the inner core from my speedo cable and lubricate it or replace the whole thing if necessary due to excess chattering behind dash. WS manual claims that the way to do this is reach up behind dash panel and disconnect the cable, then pull out the core. A few questions to anyone who has done this job:

1. It looks a pretty difficult job to get behind the dash, true/not true?
2. There appears to be some type of lock that hold cable into back of instrument?
2. Can you do this from below, disconnect at gearbox and pull it out, lubricate and push back?
4. Does the core come out easily or is it held in with a retainer of some kind?

I have standard transmission '88 5.0 with cruise control.

Many thanks for any help ,

Cheers
 
  • Sponsors (?)


Speedometer cable replacement for 87-93 Mustangs.

Note: All 89-93 cars have a VSS sensor even if they do not have cruse control. The 87-88 only have a VSS sensor if the have cruse control.
Speedo cable housing assembly without cruse control:
s08.jpg


Speedo cable housing assembly with cruse control
s09.jpg


1. Inside the car:
1.) Remove the shield around the steering column that covers the ignition switch & turn indicator switch.
2.) You now have access to the two screws that hold the lower part of the cluster housing in place. Remove them and place them in a zip bag.
3.) Use a stubby or an offset Philips screwdriver to remove the two screws on the top of the cluster housing. The screws are up close to the windshield, so they can be hard to get at.
4.) The cluster housing will now slide forward: depending on your particular car, you may or may not have to disconnect the wiring for the headlights, hazard lights, or cluster wiring. All of the wiring uses plastic connectors with plastic spring clips on them. To release the connectors, lift the plastic clips and pull straight back.
5.) The speedo cable is secured in the speedo head by a white plastic clip. Depress the clip or squeeze it and pull the cable out of the speedo head. This can be tricky, but it will come out if you have the white clip depressed enough.
6.) With speedo cable removed from the speedo head, try twisting the cable end with your fingers. If it turns more than 1/4 turn, the cable may eiter be broken or you have damge at the other end where the cable mates to the VSS sensor or speedo pickup gear in the transmission.
2.
Outside the car, replacing the cable housing assembly. The following steps are necessary only if you plan on replacing the cable & cable housing assembly.
7.) If you are going to the replace the cable housing, the next step is important. Tie a study string or wire to the VSS sensor end of the cable housing. This string or wire is to be used to fish the cable housing back through the maze of wires that is under the dash. If all you are going to do is replace the inner cable, you can omit this step.
8.) Jack up the car, all 4 tires must be off the ground. Place jackstands under the car for safety.
9.) Locate the VSS sensor on the driver’s side of the transmission tailshaft housing. The speedo cable housing will be secured in the VSS sensor with a hairpin clip Do not remove the clip!!!: The hairpin clip stays in place. If you remove it, the odds are that you will not be able to get the cable to stay in place on re-installation. Pull firmly straight back on the cable housing and it will come out. A considerable amount of effort may be required to get the cable out of the VSS sensor, but it will pull out.
10.) Release the cable housing from the clips that secure it to the car body.

Inside the car:
11.) The housing assembly can then be pulled out and the fish string or wire can be removed from the old cable housing and secured to the new one.
12.) The inner cable can be removed by pulling it out of the housing assembly. Watch out for the lubricant so that you don’t get it on the car’s interior.
13.) Lubricate only the lower part of the new cable with speedometer lubricant or graphite. Don’t use too much lubricant, or it will work its way up into the speedo head unit and damage it. Thread the inner cable into the housing, turning it as you go. When you are all the way in with the new cable, it will engage the VSS sensor and stop turning.

Outside the car, replacing the cable housing assembly. The following steps are necessary only if you plan on replacing the cable & cable housing assembly.
14.) Use the fish string or wire to feed the cable housing assembly through the dash wiring and out the cable hole in the firewall.
15.) Secure the cable in the body clips, making sure that the cable isn’t rubbing against the exhaust pipe.
16.) Push the cable housing assembly into the VSS sensor until it snaps in past the hairpin clip.

Inside the car:
17.) Push the cable housing back into the speedo head unit. You should be able to feel the white clip click into place.
18.) Reconnect all the wires & connectors on the speedo head unit.
19.) Re-install the cluster unit in the dash & tighten the 4 screws that hold it in place.
20.) Re-install the cover for the ignition switch & turn signal.
21.) If the car is up on jackstands, start the car, place it in gear & watch the speedo to see if it works OK. If you didn’t jack the car up, take a test drive.
 
My speedo was making a lot of noise and bouncing. I tried changing the cable first. It did nothing. Speedo was bad, I got a good one from Ebay and all is well. Be prepared for the lub or new cable not to fix the problem. If you want my good old cable, its yours for the price of shipping. (I paid $ 56 for a new one that did nothing) It's off of a 92 5 speed with cruse though.
 
Hey thanks for all the advice and MikeC thank you. I called Ford parts and the cabel for my mustang is Ford part # 9A820B, does that match the one that you have on offer?

Cheers
 
I did the same thing, at the beginning my speedometer was not working, I replaced the calble, and it did nothing. I took out the speedo drive gear and it was damage. I put a new one and the speedometer jumps like crazy and is not stable at all.
 
grahame said:
Hey thanks for all the advice and MikeC thank you. I called Ford parts and the cabel for my mustang is Ford part # 9A820B, does that match the one that you have on offer?

Cheers
The old cable is marked F1ZF 9A820 AA. I don't know if the B and AA are interchangeable. The ends look like the second picture above.
 
I got mine from Napa, it was about $20.00. I don't know if its the same for a 5.0 as a 2.3 though. Unfortunately, winter has arrived and I may have a cable in need of some lubing. If it gets worse I will do it if not, just turn up the radio a little:rlaugh: