Marine electronics

Faria Beede Gauges

Faria Beede has built marine instruments for over fifty years. Pick a matched gauge series, the sizes you need, and senders that fit your engine for a clean, readable helm. A clean helm starts with gauges you can read at a glance. Faria Beede has built marine instrumentation for more than fifty years. This collection covers the full range from tachometers and speedometers to fuel level, water temperature, oil pressure, voltmeters, and trim gauges in matched series that make a dash look finished. Getting it right comes down to picking one series, choosing the right sizes, and matching senders to your engine. Pick one series for a matched look Faria offers families like Chesapeake, Newport, Euro, and Coral. Each has...

322 products
1121314

Faria Beede has built marine instruments for over fifty years. Pick a matched gauge series, the sizes you need, and senders that fit your engine for a clean, readable helm.

A clean helm starts with gauges you can read at a glance. Faria Beede has built marine instrumentation for more than fifty years. This collection covers the full range from tachometers and speedometers to fuel level, water temperature, oil pressure, voltmeters, and trim gauges in matched series that make a dash look finished. Getting it right comes down to picking one series, choosing the right sizes, and matching senders to your engine.

Pick one series for a matched look

Faria offers families like Chesapeake, Newport, Euro, and Coral. Each has its own dial style, bezel, and lighting. Choose a single series and stick with it across every gauge so the helm reads as one clean set instead of a mismatched group. The series sets the look and you fill it out with the specific gauges your boat needs.

Size the gauges to the job

The big two, tachometer and speedometer, are usually four inch gauges so they read fast at speed. The support gauges, fuel, temperature, oil pressure, voltmeter, and trim, are typically two inch gauges grouped around them. Measure your dash cutouts before you order because swapping a two inch hole for a four inch gauge means cutting new openings.

Match senders to your engine

A gauge only reads correctly when it is paired with the right sender and resistance range. Fuel level senders, temperature senders, and pressure senders all have to match the gauge so confirm the engine and tank sender specs before you buy. The wrong sender resistance gives you a needle that reads high, low, or not at all.

Tach signal and speedometer type

Tachometers need the correct signal input for your engine type whether that is an outboard pulse, an alternator tap, or a specific points setting so check the engine before ordering. For speed a GPS speedometer reads true speed over ground without a pitot or paddlewheel which is why many builders now run GPS speed instead of pressure based pitot gauges that clog and lag.

Lighting and finish

Match the dial color and bezel finish to your console and confirm the gauges share the same backlighting so the helm glows evenly at night.

Plan the full set before purchase

List every function you want to monitor and note the engine make and model. This list helps match every gauge and sender in one order so the finished helm works without extra returns or delays. Check wire routing space behind the dash as well because four inch gauges need more depth than two inch units.

Installation tips for reliable readings

Run power and ground wires first and use marine grade terminals. Secure senders to the engine block or tank with proper thread sealant. After wiring test each gauge with the key on before launching so any wiring error shows up on the bench instead of on the water.

Not sure which gauges and senders your engine needs. Tell our techs your motor and what you want to monitor and we will match the series, sizes, and senders so everything reads true.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get a matched look across my gauges?

Pick a single Faria series such as Chesapeake, Newport, Euro, or Coral and use it for every gauge. Each series has its own dial style, bezel, and lighting so staying in one family keeps the helm looking like one clean set.

What size gauges do I need?

Tachometer and speedometer are usually four inch gauges so they read fast at speed. Support gauges like fuel, temperature, oil pressure, and voltmeter are typically two inch. Measure your dash cutouts before ordering.

Why does my gauge need a matching sender?

A gauge only reads correctly when paired with the right sender and resistance range. Fuel, temperature, and pressure senders must match the gauge or the needle reads high, low, or not at all. Confirm your engine and tank sender specs first.

Should I choose a GPS or pitot speedometer?

A GPS speedometer reads true speed over ground with no pitot or paddlewheel to clog or lag. Pressure based pitot speedometers work but need a clean pickup. Many builders now prefer GPS speed for accuracy and low maintenance.

Will a Faria tachometer work with my engine?

Tachometers need the correct signal input for your engine type such as an outboard pulse or alternator tap. Check your engine specs and choose the matching tach so it reads accurate RPM.

How do I confirm sender resistance before buying?

Look up the engine or tank sender specifications in the manual or on the existing unit. Match the ohm range exactly to the gauge you select so the needle moves through the full scale.

Related Collections