Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.
Speedometer with large tires -> fix
Moderator: Tiny
Speedometer with large tires -> fix
Hi all,
I found out, that the speedometer with large tires (31x10.5) is very wrong - of course It shows about 10%++ less then the actual speed (measured with GPS). I hat the same problem with my Suzuki with larger tires.
Today I fixed the problem same way I did it with the Suzuki:
It's a job of only 1-2 hrs to find a new suitable ajustment.
Follow the instructions of the repair manual to get to the speedometer...
CHANGE_1:
The speed sensor has a ajustable spring.
You'll find a very small lever with three grooves (very small). This is for pre-loading (??) the spring.
Now be careful! Just move this lever about 1mm. You will see the difference -> the pointer of the speedometer is now acting slower.
CHANGE_2:
The pointer of the speedometer has to be coreccted. Factory default the pointer shows exactly to 0km/h when there is no movement. Because of the change of the spring in step 1 you have to put the pointer a bit further downward. It is ok if the pointer shows about -5 to -10 km/h (which of course is not visible)
The whole job is "try and drive". It took me about 5 test-drives till the ajustment was done.
Table (km/h):
GPS_Speed, before_changes , after_changes
-------------------------------------------------------------------
0, 0, -7
5´,4, 0 (difficult to measure)
10, 8, 7 (difficult to measure)
30, 25, 29
50, 42, 50 (important speed)
70, 61, 71
100, 90, 103 (important speed)
I don't know so far if this changes will have affect on the speedometer only. It would be nice if the km-indicator is now also corrected - I will see and let you know.
Haasa.
Sorry for my english - but Its realy very hard to write down this technical stuff in english...
And sorry for no_pictures of the lever, spring and pointer.... (simply forgotten to take some)
I found out, that the speedometer with large tires (31x10.5) is very wrong - of course It shows about 10%++ less then the actual speed (measured with GPS). I hat the same problem with my Suzuki with larger tires.
Today I fixed the problem same way I did it with the Suzuki:
It's a job of only 1-2 hrs to find a new suitable ajustment.
Follow the instructions of the repair manual to get to the speedometer...
CHANGE_1:
The speed sensor has a ajustable spring.
You'll find a very small lever with three grooves (very small). This is for pre-loading (??) the spring.
Now be careful! Just move this lever about 1mm. You will see the difference -> the pointer of the speedometer is now acting slower.
CHANGE_2:
The pointer of the speedometer has to be coreccted. Factory default the pointer shows exactly to 0km/h when there is no movement. Because of the change of the spring in step 1 you have to put the pointer a bit further downward. It is ok if the pointer shows about -5 to -10 km/h (which of course is not visible)
The whole job is "try and drive". It took me about 5 test-drives till the ajustment was done.
Table (km/h):
GPS_Speed, before_changes , after_changes
-------------------------------------------------------------------
0, 0, -7
5´,4, 0 (difficult to measure)
10, 8, 7 (difficult to measure)
30, 25, 29
50, 42, 50 (important speed)
70, 61, 71
100, 90, 103 (important speed)
I don't know so far if this changes will have affect on the speedometer only. It would be nice if the km-indicator is now also corrected - I will see and let you know.
Haasa.
Sorry for my english - but Its realy very hard to write down this technical stuff in english...
And sorry for no_pictures of the lever, spring and pointer.... (simply forgotten to take some)
http://www.uahhh.org
88' Suzuki SJ413, 92' Daihatsu Feroza
88' Suzuki SJ413, 92' Daihatsu Feroza
Where is the speedo sensor located, I assume it's behind the dash somewhere? Is it illegal to tamper with the speedo? In this case, since your correcting an error caused by running bigger tyres it would seem safe and acceptable.
Can someone confirm that if your speedo is out then your odometer be out also?
Cheers
Jim
Can someone confirm that if your speedo is out then your odometer be out also?
Cheers
Jim
89 Narrow CracK Feroza EL- X
2001 NM Pajero Exceed 3.5V6
Coming Soon 2010 Defender 90
2001 NM Pajero Exceed 3.5V6
Coming Soon 2010 Defender 90
As these systems were explained to me - I make no guarantees for the accuracy, or the relevance to anything ever made by Daihatsu.
The mechanical odometer is effectively a fixed gear train - as the tyres turn the wheels inside the odometer turn too. Larger tyres make the entire drive train turn more slowly, including the wheels inside the odometer. The only way to correct that is to change the gearing somewhere in the gear train to correct the gearing change created by the taller tyres. This is normally done (I thought) at the gearbox end of the system.
The same spinning shaft which drives the odometer also spins a magnet on a tiny drum, which spins near a magnet attached to the speedo needle shaft. As the drum magnet passes the needle magnet the needle magnet attempts to follow it, but a spring holds the needle back. As the drum spins faster it pulls on the speedo needle shaft more often, causing the needle to rotate further and indicate more speed. The pulsing of the spinning magnet is effectively masked by damping in the system - primarily inertia. I'm guessing Haasa has tweaked the hold-back spring?
If it's an all electronic system the speedo is an ammeter reading a current generated by the electronics, which is counting a pulse stream sent from the gearbox. Again, tweaking a spring will affect the way the needle indicates the signal current, but have no effect on the system which is counting pulses and rotating the odometer drum.
Either way, tweaking a spring to correct the speedometer needle shouldn't affect the rate at which the odometer "measures" the distance.
If any of the above makes sense I should have opened another bottle...
Scott
The mechanical odometer is effectively a fixed gear train - as the tyres turn the wheels inside the odometer turn too. Larger tyres make the entire drive train turn more slowly, including the wheels inside the odometer. The only way to correct that is to change the gearing somewhere in the gear train to correct the gearing change created by the taller tyres. This is normally done (I thought) at the gearbox end of the system.
The same spinning shaft which drives the odometer also spins a magnet on a tiny drum, which spins near a magnet attached to the speedo needle shaft. As the drum magnet passes the needle magnet the needle magnet attempts to follow it, but a spring holds the needle back. As the drum spins faster it pulls on the speedo needle shaft more often, causing the needle to rotate further and indicate more speed. The pulsing of the spinning magnet is effectively masked by damping in the system - primarily inertia. I'm guessing Haasa has tweaked the hold-back spring?
If it's an all electronic system the speedo is an ammeter reading a current generated by the electronics, which is counting a pulse stream sent from the gearbox. Again, tweaking a spring will affect the way the needle indicates the signal current, but have no effect on the system which is counting pulses and rotating the odometer drum.
Either way, tweaking a spring to correct the speedometer needle shouldn't affect the rate at which the odometer "measures" the distance.
If any of the above makes sense I should have opened another bottle...
Scott
To do it electronically you need a circuit to read the frequency of the incoming pulse train, scale it appropriately and generate a new pulse train at the corrected frequency. Could possibly be done with analogue stuff: Frequency Counter to produce analogue voltage -> amplifier to scale voltage -> Voltage Controlled Oscillator to generate new Pulse Train at the corrected frequency. It's real easy when you say it quickly and even easier when you have no intention of trying to prove it.
These days its probably easier to throw a microprocessor into it - or find another drive gear for the pulse generator...
Scott
These days its probably easier to throw a microprocessor into it - or find another drive gear for the pulse generator...
Scott
Hi,
YES.
I drove to our offroad area (in Austria it is forbidden to drive in the woods, meadow, ...) today to test the offroad-abilities of my Feroza - but that's a different story. They trip to the area (~12km) gave me some time to check the operation of the modified speedometer:
- odometer (thanks for the vocabulary) works still wrong (very wrong )
- speedometer is nearly perfect. Sorry - the table I posted obove is not correct.
NEW Table (km/h):
GPS_Speed, before_changes , after_changes
-------------------------------------------------------------------
0, 0, -7
20, 12, 18
30, 25, 28
50, 42, 51
70, 61, 70
100, 90, 98
not so bad, what do you think?
But I was very suprised when I found out today that vmax = ~125km/h (GPS) with my "new" engine (new piston rings, new gaskets, new planned cylinder head, new..., new ...). Thats not very fast . Speed limit in Austria is 130km/h on highways (and billing starts at ~140-150km/h ). Shall I start playing around with pre/post igition timing? Now I'm using a bit "pre ignition" to get more torque in 1500-3000rpm for offroading.
How fast is YOUR Feroza running with 31x10.5 or 30x9.5 tires
How is YOUR ignition set (I guess factory default is +3°)
Best,
Haasa
I'm guessing Haasa has tweaked the hold-back spring?
YES.
I drove to our offroad area (in Austria it is forbidden to drive in the woods, meadow, ...) today to test the offroad-abilities of my Feroza - but that's a different story. They trip to the area (~12km) gave me some time to check the operation of the modified speedometer:
- odometer (thanks for the vocabulary) works still wrong (very wrong )
- speedometer is nearly perfect. Sorry - the table I posted obove is not correct.
NEW Table (km/h):
GPS_Speed, before_changes , after_changes
-------------------------------------------------------------------
0, 0, -7
20, 12, 18
30, 25, 28
50, 42, 51
70, 61, 70
100, 90, 98
not so bad, what do you think?
But I was very suprised when I found out today that vmax = ~125km/h (GPS) with my "new" engine (new piston rings, new gaskets, new planned cylinder head, new..., new ...). Thats not very fast . Speed limit in Austria is 130km/h on highways (and billing starts at ~140-150km/h ). Shall I start playing around with pre/post igition timing? Now I'm using a bit "pre ignition" to get more torque in 1500-3000rpm for offroading.
How fast is YOUR Feroza running with 31x10.5 or 30x9.5 tires
How is YOUR ignition set (I guess factory default is +3°)
Best,
Haasa
http://www.uahhh.org
88' Suzuki SJ413, 92' Daihatsu Feroza
88' Suzuki SJ413, 92' Daihatsu Feroza
murcod wrote:Mine has done an indicated 140km/h fully loaded with a trailer.
Freeowwww! Don't I push my little truck hard enough? 110kph@4000rpm is about as fast as i'd want to go in mine. Luckily thats the top legal speed here in Vic. How many revs were you cranking Dave?
1996 XJ Jeep Cherokee - VERY red and VERY stock!
2001 KJ Jeep Cherokee - cooked her bad... sitting in the driveway!
[i]- ex Feroza man (eventually died on me) -[/i]
2001 KJ Jeep Cherokee - cooked her bad... sitting in the driveway!
[i]- ex Feroza man (eventually died on me) -[/i]
hmmm.... i've come close to the red line in 5th... got to 110 mph which i was told the conversion went to somethin like 178 km/hr, my gage maxes out at 115 mph so i got damn close... had maybe another 300 rpms befire hitting red line... was freaking sweet. boy did roza howl. she also shook pretty badly too. light as a feather she is.
[quote="simplypv"]its a Strine thing and i just dont understand![/quote]
Regards, PV
Team [size=134][color=red][i]Anti-[/i][/color][/size]Asshat [b][color=orange]#5[/color][/b]- Yank!
Regards, PV
Team [size=134][color=red][i]Anti-[/i][/color][/size]Asshat [b][color=orange]#5[/color][/b]- Yank!
BundyRumandCoke wrote:To get back to the original question, I have the same problem in my Rocky. I run a GPS on the dash at all times, and it is usually set to speedo and odometer when I am highway driving. Its always accurate, no matter what size tyres I have on.
So your GPS is accurate no matter what size tyre you have on..... ... strange that!!!
What about your speedo compared to the GPS readout?
David
crowey wrote:I think that was a sly way of taking the piss out of you!!
Yes, I read it a few times and thought " What the hell are you trying to say?!"
crowey wrote:I just drive at the same speed as everyone else
Here in SA that could mean you're doing 20km/h over the limit! There are lots of maniacs over here.
David
a much easier way to correct your speed is buy using a calculator. First divide the size of you new tyres with the size of your standard tyre
( 215/75/R15 =26.9 inches) so if you run 31s its
31 divided by 26.9 = 1.152
so now you multiply your dash reading by 1.152 and this gives you your actual speed. calculate them all and stick it besides your dash and you will always know. plus when ya sell the car you just put standard size tyres on it and keep good tyres for next 4x4. complete table is below for a F300 feroza
dash speed
10 -------- 11.5
20 -------- 23.0
30 -------- 34.6
40 -------- 46.1
50 -------- 57.6
60 -------- 69.1
70 -------- 80.6
80 -------- 92.2
90 -------- 103.7
100 ------- 115.2
hope this helps
or check out this tyre calculator link http://www.miata.net/garage/tirecalc.html
( 215/75/R15 =26.9 inches) so if you run 31s its
31 divided by 26.9 = 1.152
so now you multiply your dash reading by 1.152 and this gives you your actual speed. calculate them all and stick it besides your dash and you will always know. plus when ya sell the car you just put standard size tyres on it and keep good tyres for next 4x4. complete table is below for a F300 feroza
dash speed
10 -------- 11.5
20 -------- 23.0
30 -------- 34.6
40 -------- 46.1
50 -------- 57.6
60 -------- 69.1
70 -------- 80.6
80 -------- 92.2
90 -------- 103.7
100 ------- 115.2
hope this helps
or check out this tyre calculator link http://www.miata.net/garage/tirecalc.html
1999 SQ625 Manual Grand Vitara. Lifted, Twin Locked, 31' Extremes, dual Batteries, Winch.
Lots of custom gear as I cant afford the proper stuff.
Lots of custom gear as I cant afford the proper stuff.
grey zook wrote:a much easier way to correct your speed is buy using a calculator. First divide the size of you new tyres with the size of your standard tyre
( 215/75/R15 =26.9 inches) so if you run 31s its
31 divided by 26.9 = 1.152
so now you multiply your dash reading by 1.152 and this gives you your actual speed. calculate them all and stick it besides your dash and you will always know. plus when ya sell the car you just put standard size tyres on it and keep good tyres for next 4x4. complete table is below for a F300 feroza
dash speed
10 -------- 11.5
20 -------- 23.0
30 -------- 34.6
40 -------- 46.1
50 -------- 57.6
60 -------- 69.1
70 -------- 80.6
80 -------- 92.2
90 -------- 103.7
100 ------- 115.2
hope this helps
or check out this tyre calculator link http://www.miata.net/garage/tirecalc.html
You da man- that's gold matey
89 Narrow CracK Feroza EL- X
2001 NM Pajero Exceed 3.5V6
Coming Soon 2010 Defender 90
2001 NM Pajero Exceed 3.5V6
Coming Soon 2010 Defender 90
well after me first speeding fine after puttin bigger tyres on it i decided to do some brain rattling and actually made a new speedo sticker that just went on existing dash was pretty silly looking but stoped me gettin fines
1999 SQ625 Manual Grand Vitara. Lifted, Twin Locked, 31' Extremes, dual Batteries, Winch.
Lots of custom gear as I cant afford the proper stuff.
Lots of custom gear as I cant afford the proper stuff.
Well with all this discussion on speedos and bigger tyres I finally decided to have a go at correcting mine. I knew it read low after I put the 31 inch tyres on, so using the tyre calculator (thanks buddy) I reckon it was reading about 5k low at 60 k. Since me son is starting to drive it I figured I had better fix it up.
I made enquiries a couple of years ago about a ratio adjuster that goes in the side of the gearbox and the speedo cable plugs into it. It was about $140.
So after pulling apart the dash and speedo I found the diesel rocky speedo has adjustments for the spring tension and the zero position.
Good on you Daihatsu!
So I connected the speedo up to my battery drill and found I was now doing 58k while conveniently sitting at my dining room table, and not a speed camera in sight.
A few adjustments later and I was now doing 64 k. The spring adjustment is now wound back as far as it will go.
I'll have to get a hold of a GPS at some stage to confirm the accuracy, but at least its a bit closer to the real speed.
Pretty simple job to get the dash apart and adjust the speedo. Don't know why I didn't do it years ago.
Stu
I made enquiries a couple of years ago about a ratio adjuster that goes in the side of the gearbox and the speedo cable plugs into it. It was about $140.
So after pulling apart the dash and speedo I found the diesel rocky speedo has adjustments for the spring tension and the zero position.
Good on you Daihatsu!
So I connected the speedo up to my battery drill and found I was now doing 58k while conveniently sitting at my dining room table, and not a speed camera in sight.
A few adjustments later and I was now doing 64 k. The spring adjustment is now wound back as far as it will go.
I'll have to get a hold of a GPS at some stage to confirm the accuracy, but at least its a bit closer to the real speed.
Pretty simple job to get the dash apart and adjust the speedo. Don't know why I didn't do it years ago.
Stu
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 32 guests