Not sure I understand the relevance of mentioning four people with no failures, when GT owners are in the middle of a gauge failure epidemic. The problem is so bad that an aftermarket company has started manufacturing replacement gauges.
You don't understand the relevance because you took it out of context and in doing so completely missed the point. Let's see if I can clear it up for you.
Texas Mongrel said:
I'm therefore assuming that the gauge problem is related to input voltage? Is there a correlation of permanently-defunct gauges with cars that aren't regularly driven?
Here, Texas Mongrel wonders aloud if there is a correlation between bad gauges and cars that don't get driven regularly.
DBK said:
Mongrel, I will say that when Camilo, Jeff Larson, Ralphie and Myself were at the GT Guys barn discussing the gauges, between the 4 of us, we'd driven nearly 200,000 miles in GTs and never had a bad gauge.
Here, I address Mongrel's hypothesis by showing where 4 people that have owned 6 high mileage GTs all had no bad gauges. The cars referenced had ~80,000, ~40,000, ~32,000, ~30,000, ~25,000 and ~22,000 miles. Maybe Texas Mongrel is correct and there is some correlation between cars that sit and gauges that go bad. It's at least worth investigating if there is a relationship between regular use and gauge reliability to determine the
cause of why they are going bad.
Hopefully this clears up the relevance of mentioning the 4 people with no failures for you.
Sticking heads in sand only works for ostriches.
I've collected bad gauges every chance I get. I've taken them, by hand, to the SVT office in Allen Park. I've taken them, by hand, to the director of SVT's house. I've probably called, emailed and texted about it a couple hundred times. I've collected as much data as I can and given it to them. I've tried to suggest ways to SVT and FCSD on how they can address the situation. Considering I don't have any bad gauges, it should be pretty obvious what my motivation is. I guess this qualifies as "sticking heads in sand."