speedo accuracy

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JohnnyB
Posts: 52
Joined: Mon Apr 24, 2006 12:37 pm
Location: Wiltshire UK

speedo accuracy

Post by JohnnyB »

Are they generally accurate?
having just moved from a Hornet which has a wildly optomistic speedo thought I'd best check.

How many mph per 1000rpm in top on standard gearing?


It could be the fact that now I'm now on a bike with a faring and plenty of grunt of course......
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VTRgirl
Posts: 2281
Joined: Mon May 16, 2005 3:22 pm
Location: Sunny Queensland, Great Southern Land

Post by VTRgirl »

May I add my own question to this thread? :lol:

If the odometre is out, does that automatically mean the speedo's out? And by the same amount? My odometre is out by 10%...
If you ate yourself would you become twice as big or simply disappear?
JohnnyB
Posts: 52
Joined: Mon Apr 24, 2006 12:37 pm
Location: Wiltshire UK

speedo accuracy

Post by JohnnyB »

Yes You may :D
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kevg
Posts: 1361
Joined: Mon Dec 09, 2002 5:38 pm
Location: Ex-Paisley, Aberdeenshire now.

Post by kevg »

i've found when i'm out with mates on the motorway i'm sitting at about 105mph and they say they haven't been above 95. has happened with different folk on bandit 12's and a BMW GS, bit annoying when i think i'm gonna get done at any minute and they are getting away from me because i slow down to below a ton.
cheerz

kev
mik_str
Posts: 2149
Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2004 10:45 pm
Location: Montreal, Canada

Post by mik_str »

Hello everyone,

According to info posted on the Speedohealer Web site, it is not uncommon for odometers to be right on with speedos being optimistic. A few years back (when I was still running OEM gearing), I tested the odometer (have areas on highways here in Canada with mileage indicated in tenths of a km specifically for this purpose) and found it to be dead-on. The speedo is about 5.7% off I believe. If you go to the OzFirestorm site, there is a downloadable Excel spreadsheet that allows you to calculate the actual speed (hence speedo error). The beauty of it is that you can enter your own gearing (if non-OEM) and get accurate info.

Hope this helps

Mikstr
xxxrated
Posts: 150
Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2005 9:33 pm

Post by xxxrated »

does anyone know how much difference dropping a tooth on the front will make to the speedo??
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Max
Posts: 878
Joined: Fri Mar 12, 2004 10:12 am
Location: Pembrokeshire

Post by Max »

http://www.kamware.com/free.htm

He has written a exe that does the calcs for you
primary reduction 1.682 44 74
1st gear 2.733 15 41
2nd gear 1.813 16 29
3rd 1.429 21 30
4th 1.207 29 35
5th 1.080 25 27
6th 0.962 26 25


tyre sizes etc are variable approx 24.8 inches 77.91 for my storm

the sheet agrees within 1 mph with the sigma on my storm
Max

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eddvtr1000
Posts: 177
Joined: Wed Jun 08, 2005 9:07 am
Location: staffs

Post by eddvtr1000 »

i think the standard for vtr's out of the factory is 8% give or take.
when ive had the gps going its been 78 on the bike when im actually only doing 70 on gps.
the speedo's are very optomistic :)
4 cyl = 2ltr , 2 cyl = 1ltr it's all relative.
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Stormin Ben
Posts: 1234
Joined: Sun Dec 01, 2002 12:23 am
Location: Birmingham

Post by Stormin Ben »

Whats a speedo? :lol:

My bikes only got a rev counter, some warning lights, an oil temp guage and an economy meter (needle straight up = most economic, needle either side = less economic)
I've got an inferiority complex
But its not a very good one!
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gcs
Posts: 365
Joined: Tue Apr 11, 2006 7:07 am
Location: New Zealand

Post by gcs »

Stormin Ben wrote:Whats a speedo? :lol:

My bikes only got a rev counter, some warning lights, an oil temp guage and an economy meter (needle straight up = most economic, needle either side = less economic)
Like your style, man. 8) 8) 8) 8) 8) 8)
Craig from the land of the long white cloud. Teal VTR 2001.
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