I've been working on my 1984 Century project car today. It had a sorry cluster with only a speedometer and gas gauge. I had this cluster with voltmeter, temp gauge, gas and speedometer. The speedometer was bad so I installed the good one from the cluster that came in the car. I posted about it this morning already.

The clusters are physically interchangable however the wiring is totally different. All wires had to be re-pinned in the connectors. Thankfully, only 3 wires had to re-pin from the left to right connector! Those required extending the wires. This is how it looks after the rewiring:

Below is the wiring changes to be made, click to see it.
http://68.209.87.173/84_Century/gauges/cluster_pin2.jpg
Next problem was where to put the sender for the gauge. My 1986 Century has the sender in the rear bank cylinder head. There is a 3/8 plug in that area on the 60° motor but this car's Buick V6 does not have any remaining unoccupied sensor ports. I found the solution on 60°V6.com. It's the 1996 and newer 3-wire sensor. This sensor has a standard-size body with a 3/8 pipe thread. It contains both an isolated 2-wire sensing element for the ECM, and a ground-referenced one-wire sensing element for the panel gauge. The ECM sensor element has the same resistance characteristics as the original 2-wire sensor, but I was not sure about the instrument panel sender. Was worth a try, though! This is the original 2-wire ECM sensor, installed in a tee because there are no more available ports in the engine:

This is the new 3-wire unit, showing the connector and the plug for it:

Here I have made up a harness and plugged it into the 3-wire sensor. The 2-pin wetherpack is the ECM's side, and the 1-pin is for the gauge cluster:

The end result is a nice, clean install with no clutter. Hard to tell the difference from the original 2-wire sensor.

And the burning question is answered by Ease Diagnosis...


So now I have a temperature gauge! The part number of that 3-wire sensor is GM#10096181 I don't have the number for the mating connector but it is a standard MetriPack connector I use at work for pressure transducers. Many parts places have it, it fits this and TPS sensors, too.
Three-wire CTS Pinout:
A- ECM sensor
B- ECM Sensor
C- Panel gauge sender
Hope this inerests ya!
David

The clusters are physically interchangable however the wiring is totally different. All wires had to be re-pinned in the connectors. Thankfully, only 3 wires had to re-pin from the left to right connector! Those required extending the wires. This is how it looks after the rewiring:

Below is the wiring changes to be made, click to see it.
http://68.209.87.173/84_Century/gauges/cluster_pin2.jpg
Next problem was where to put the sender for the gauge. My 1986 Century has the sender in the rear bank cylinder head. There is a 3/8 plug in that area on the 60° motor but this car's Buick V6 does not have any remaining unoccupied sensor ports. I found the solution on 60°V6.com. It's the 1996 and newer 3-wire sensor. This sensor has a standard-size body with a 3/8 pipe thread. It contains both an isolated 2-wire sensing element for the ECM, and a ground-referenced one-wire sensing element for the panel gauge. The ECM sensor element has the same resistance characteristics as the original 2-wire sensor, but I was not sure about the instrument panel sender. Was worth a try, though! This is the original 2-wire ECM sensor, installed in a tee because there are no more available ports in the engine:

This is the new 3-wire unit, showing the connector and the plug for it:

Here I have made up a harness and plugged it into the 3-wire sensor. The 2-pin wetherpack is the ECM's side, and the 1-pin is for the gauge cluster:

The end result is a nice, clean install with no clutter. Hard to tell the difference from the original 2-wire sensor.

And the burning question is answered by Ease Diagnosis...


So now I have a temperature gauge! The part number of that 3-wire sensor is GM#10096181 I don't have the number for the mating connector but it is a standard MetriPack connector I use at work for pressure transducers. Many parts places have it, it fits this and TPS sensors, too.
Three-wire CTS Pinout:
A- ECM sensor
B- ECM Sensor
C- Panel gauge sender
Hope this inerests ya!
David
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