Grant81rs wrote:At 110kph on the speedo, the GPS shows 112kph @4500rpms - is this normal or not??
Well that confirms the speedo isn't too bad, but the tacho is reading high.
Three things to contemplate Grant. Assess, repair or replace.
1. Substitute the parts to see if the problem replicates. We have the parts so doing that is easy enough. Just tedious. When we next catch up, I have a do-dad that measures rpm. We can compare real rpm to tacho reading.
2. If one of the instruments, speedo or tach then shows that it's kaput, I can take it to Otto @ Ringwood Instruments for assessment. He does Motometer, but I'm unsure what he charges. He should be able to do something as overall the things are grossly intact.
3. Save up for replacements. They're out there, but they're getting expensive, and second hand they might have similar problems.
Last edited by SteveD on Sat Feb 28, 2015 7:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I would check the tach against an electronic meter before I assumed, I went a bought a new on,e or had it worked on, just as you checked the speedometer against the GPS.
Last edited by Major Softie on Mon Mar 02, 2015 5:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Major Softie wrote:I would check the tach against an electronic meter before I assumed I went a bought a new one or had it worked on, just as you checked the speedometer against the GPS.
Gidday,
Thank our next plan of attack MS... Will let you know the result when it happens
Rob wrote:Also, the gear set in the final drive could have been changed, with no mention of it on the outside of the case.
Exactly why I was saying not to assume the tach was off without checking it against another known good meter.
I suppose checking the turns ratio of the wheel to drive shaft would be a good thing to check to make sure the stamped ratio actually reflects what's inside the drive.