1.............What year / model?
2............Go here and download a free factory manual
http://www.forabodiesonly.com/mopar/showthread.php?p=1970088617
More stuff here
http://www.mymopar.com/index.php?pid=31
Here's how your light switch and instrument power works.
First, there are TWO sources of power FEEDING TO the light switch. On most these cars, a branch off the big black ammeter wire up under the dash feeds UNFUSED power to B1 on the switch. This supplies ONLY the headlights, which have their own breaker built into the switch
Park, tail, and instrument power goes TO the headlight switch B2 from the tail fuse. This B2 powers tail, park, and instrument lamps
This is a bit of a trick. Instrument (dash dimmer controlled) lamp power goes through the dimmer control, TO the instrument fuse (tan) and THEN through the instrument fuse, and OUT to all dimmer controlled dash lamps on ORANGE
So the instrument fuse will ONLY have power if..........
The tail fuse is good...........
The tail light circuit works.........
The light switch must be in either park or head
The dash dimmer is "twisted somewhat left" to brighten the lamps
ONLY THEN will the inst. fuse show power
So far as your cluster it MUST be grounded. It would behoove you to go through the cluster if you have not
1.....Add a ground wire trace out the PC board and find a ground screw trace and add a pigtail wire. Bolt this to the dash frame or column support
2....Check for broken harness connector pins or bad connections at them. Repair as necessary
3....On my Dart, the "plug in" socket for the instrument regulator, the brass contact fingers were not making contact with the actual board traces. Solder jumpers across
4....Replace the old unreliable IVR with a modern solid state one. There are several outfits that sell them
5.....Loosen / tighten the fuel and temp gauge nuts several times to "scrub" the connections clean, and consider replacing the "fake" nuts with real nuts
6.....Clean the PC board where the sockets twist in.
7....Clean up or replace the sockets. Bend the fingers for better contact. Replace the bulbs or "go LED," LOL
This would be a good time to "jimmy" up the cluster to power and check that the gauges actually "sort of work." You can do this with clip leads. Substitute test resistors for the senders. "Full" is about 10---13 ohms, "1/2" is about 23 -- 25 and "empty" or "cold" is about 70--75 ohms. Leave the gauges hooked up for at least 1 minute for testing. You MUST have a proper working instrument regulator for this test.