Speed gear color
21 posts
• Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
Sorry if this subject has been beaten to death before, but the search feature does not seem to be particularly intuitive...
If I recall correctly, 3.9 is blue, 3.7 is black and 3.5 I'm not sure.
My diff gear is 4.44:1 and a blue speedo gear(3.9) is currently installed so obviously there will be speedometer error. So two questions. 1. is there a correct speedo gear available for the 4.44 rear end? Who/where?
2. If not, is it possible to have the speedometer instrument re-callibrated?
Thanks,
AMA
If I recall correctly, 3.9 is blue, 3.7 is black and 3.5 I'm not sure.
My diff gear is 4.44:1 and a blue speedo gear(3.9) is currently installed so obviously there will be speedometer error. So two questions. 1. is there a correct speedo gear available for the 4.44 rear end? Who/where?
2. If not, is it possible to have the speedometer instrument re-callibrated?
Thanks,
AMA
- TurbineHeli
- Second Gear
- Posts: 64
- Joined: 24 Nov 2012
I'm not really up to speed on the speedo drive gearing colours.
My Elan with a 3,54 diff' & (please note) 175-60 x 14" tyres has "black" being deemed by a "specialist" as being most suitable.
Yes there are good guys out there who can & will, for a reasonable price, recalibrate your speedo.
They ask you to carry out one or another simple task to help them with the calibration:-
A typical example is for you to push you car in a straight line until the rear wheels have completed 4 rotations.
Whilst doing that you must observe how many times the speedo drive cable rotates.
Obviously this requires the speedo to be removed to obtain access to view that cable; but hey you're going to be sending it away anyway aren't you
Cheers
John
My Elan with a 3,54 diff' & (please note) 175-60 x 14" tyres has "black" being deemed by a "specialist" as being most suitable.
Yes there are good guys out there who can & will, for a reasonable price, recalibrate your speedo.
They ask you to carry out one or another simple task to help them with the calibration:-
A typical example is for you to push you car in a straight line until the rear wheels have completed 4 rotations.
Whilst doing that you must observe how many times the speedo drive cable rotates.
Obviously this requires the speedo to be removed to obtain access to view that cable; but hey you're going to be sending it away anyway aren't you
Cheers
John
Beware of the Illuminati
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
-
GrUmPyBoDgEr - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2346
- Joined: 29 Oct 2004
Surely it was only yesterday?
elan-wanted-f4/gearbox-housing-extension-assembly-2821e7a039a-t26798.html
John
elan-wanted-f4/gearbox-housing-extension-assembly-2821e7a039a-t26798.html
John
-
john.p.clegg - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 4533
- Joined: 21 Sep 2003
Tommy Sandham has compiled a data book for the Cortina and about halfway down there is a chart of what driver gear and what driven gears to use with what rear axle ratio and tire size.
click on the link and search for
Speedometer Drive Gears
http://freespace.virgin.net/tommy.sandham/databook.htm
I don't have any idea of where to obtain a 6 tooth drive gear but I have a few of the 7 tooth ones.
hope this helps
Gary
click on the link and search for
Speedometer Drive Gears
http://freespace.virgin.net/tommy.sandham/databook.htm
I don't have any idea of where to obtain a 6 tooth drive gear but I have a few of the 7 tooth ones.
hope this helps
Gary
-
garyeanderson - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2634
- Joined: 12 Sep 2003
TurbineHeli wrote:Sorry if this subject has been beaten to death before, but the search feature does not seem to be particularly intuitive...
2. If not, is it possible to have the speedometer instrument re-calibrated?
Thanks,
AMA
Short answer is yes, and might be preferable...
Here is link to a document I found helpful. Might be more detail than you need...
http://home.comcast.net/~rhodes/speedo.pdf
I had my speedo done by Nisonger due to a diff & transmission change. They are located in Mamaroneck, NY...
http://www.nisonger.com/index.htm
Basically their are two issues to sort out. You sort out the two issues for the odometer reading first, then the speedo reading is checked and calibrated on the bench using a known input rotational speed and the overall TPM.
1. The turns per mile (TPM) of the cable specific to your transmission speedo gear, diff, and tires. You can measure this by pushing the car a known distance or number of tire revolutions & counting the number of speedo cable rotations. Like John mentions above, each repair shop seems to do this a bit differently, but they will all provide you with what they want ahead of time. Some of the different shops I saw want 4 tire rotations, 6 tire rotations, 52.8 feet or 100th of a mile of tire travel, etc., but they all effectively do the same thing which is provide the shop with the actual TPM output at the cable for your present set-up. I opted to just give them the TPM I wanted (see below to determine this).
2. The TPM of the speedo head. For my Plus 2 it is 940 TPM stock; yours may be different. You can see the stock number on the speedo face just below the odometer to the right in small white numbers.
For my MT75 transmission, I opted to leave the gear in the transmission alone (actually I have no idea what it is) and get the speedo head done. I simply calculated the error/difference driving along the Interstate for about 15 or 20 mile posts, comparing to the odometer reading, and then calculating the required TPM from the known 940 TPM on my speedo face. I provided the required TPM number to Nisonger's (1000 TPM in my case) with the speedo head packaging, and they re-calibrated the odometer with an internal gear change and then adjusted the speedometer reading as required for age and wear. Turn around on the job was about six or eight weeks, and cost about $200 IIRC; I think this is their busy time of year.
David has done an excellent spreadsheet for calculating revs per mile etc. for any diff & tire combo. I used this and GPS speed readings to factor in the impact of future tire size changes and to determine that the speedometer and odometer were out of whack with one another, so I knew I needed the speedo head done along with the tachometer. You can use this spreadsheet to see what the impact of the transmission gear change will be ahead of time and see if you will get close to your speedo head TPM with your particular tire, diff & existing/modified transmission speedo gear.
Been a while, but I think the document above provides a pretty complete list of the gear combo's that are readily available for the Smiths speedo's. I made sure I was asking Nisonger for a TPM figure I figured they could easily build up and was within a reasonable percentage error to my custom set-up.
If your tire, diff & transmission speedo gear combo does not work out to a readily available speedo head TPM, they can apparently build up a transmission deal that mounts on the back of the speedo head. I was worried the Lotus would be tight for room for this approach. IIRC the transmission is about 3" long.
Sorry for length; probably more detail than you need. Sounds like you can either try a revised transmission gear or calculate the impact of a new gear and see if you can get close to the TPM requirement on your existing speedo head. Other approach is to leave the gear you have and calibrate the head TPM as required; you can check if this will work for you first with the info above. You may not have to do both, and if you find the speedo & odometer are out of whack you may want to just get it calibrated & serviced (or venture into doing it yourself as per Mr. Rhodes) and leave your existing gear in place.
HTH
PS I just remembered my speedo cable or angle drive broke on my last trip, so I need to fix that up this winter.
Stu
1969 Plus 2 Federal LHD
1969 Plus 2 Federal LHD
-
stugilmour - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1944
- Joined: 03 Sep 2007
Stu mentioned there is a spreadsheet to calculate turns per mile and other data.
Read the help text closely. It tells you how to calculate the gears for the speedometer head. That way any possible inaccuracies using the tire rolling methods are obviated. But if you give Nisonger or other speedometer shop the TPM figure, they will know how to fit the right gears in the speedometer head.
The spreadsheet is located here:
elan-f15/updated-spreadsheets-t18445.html
David
1968 36/7988
Read the help text closely. It tells you how to calculate the gears for the speedometer head. That way any possible inaccuracies using the tire rolling methods are obviated. But if you give Nisonger or other speedometer shop the TPM figure, they will know how to fit the right gears in the speedometer head.
The spreadsheet is located here:
elan-f15/updated-spreadsheets-t18445.html
David
1968 36/7988
-
msd1107 - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 770
- Joined: 24 Sep 2003
msd1107 wrote:Stu mentioned there is a spreadsheet to calculate turns per mile and other data.
Read the help text closely. It tells you how to calculate the gears for the speedometer head. That way any possible inaccuracies using the tire rolling methods are obviated. But if you give Nisonger or other speedometer shop the TPM figure, they will know how to fit the right gears in the speedometer head.
The spreadsheet is located here:
elan-f15/updated-spreadsheets-t18445.html
David
1968 36/7988
Hi David,
that's interesting but for me a bit confusing.
In asking this I'm contradicting my philosophy on "nit-picking"
Anyway, here goes. You wrote:-
"That way any possible inaccuracies using the tire rolling methods are obviated".
How is a calculated (theoretical?) solution more accurate than an actual measured "rolling tyre method".
My question is really rhetorical & not my intention to demand a scientific explanation.
It would go over my head anyway
Cheers
John
Beware of the Illuminati
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
-
GrUmPyBoDgEr - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2346
- Joined: 29 Oct 2004
Thanks for the link to the latest and greatest version David. I found the sheet very useful and accurate.
John, I used the sheet a bunch to calculate speed to rpm in all five gears for two tire combo's I have run and it is quite accurate. Keep in mind the empirical method only uses about 1/100th of a mile, so probably has some built in error as well. Thats the reason (besides ease) I calibrated to mile posts over a significant distance. One speedo company wanted three readings using the tire rotation method, so they are well aware of the inherent inaccuracy of the method.
In addition, my tach precision varies considerably with temperature, even after a re-build to work with my Pertronix. Prior to rebuild I found it varied by about 300 to 500 rpm, so went with the calculated values and GPS speed readings as the benchmark numbers. Since a recent tire change my speedo is out by about 3% which I can live with. Probably should have accounted for this by requesting 1024 or 1025 TPM instead of 1000 TPM as required, as I was pretty sure I was changing to stock tire size with a slight change in rolling circumference.
The whole deal is kind of a horseshoes affair. Will be interesting to hear from David if he has put in a tire inflation bugger factor though; on page 23 Rhodes talks about an "industry standard" bugger factor of about 3%.
AMA, another quick point. If you sent the speedo head off for service, tell them if you want the odometer adjusted to zero or left with the present reading. They phoned me to check this point.
Cheers!
John, I used the sheet a bunch to calculate speed to rpm in all five gears for two tire combo's I have run and it is quite accurate. Keep in mind the empirical method only uses about 1/100th of a mile, so probably has some built in error as well. Thats the reason (besides ease) I calibrated to mile posts over a significant distance. One speedo company wanted three readings using the tire rotation method, so they are well aware of the inherent inaccuracy of the method.
In addition, my tach precision varies considerably with temperature, even after a re-build to work with my Pertronix. Prior to rebuild I found it varied by about 300 to 500 rpm, so went with the calculated values and GPS speed readings as the benchmark numbers. Since a recent tire change my speedo is out by about 3% which I can live with. Probably should have accounted for this by requesting 1024 or 1025 TPM instead of 1000 TPM as required, as I was pretty sure I was changing to stock tire size with a slight change in rolling circumference.
The whole deal is kind of a horseshoes affair. Will be interesting to hear from David if he has put in a tire inflation bugger factor though; on page 23 Rhodes talks about an "industry standard" bugger factor of about 3%.
AMA, another quick point. If you sent the speedo head off for service, tell them if you want the odometer adjusted to zero or left with the present reading. They phoned me to check this point.
Cheers!
Last edited by stugilmour on Wed Dec 19, 2012 9:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Stu
1969 Plus 2 Federal LHD
1969 Plus 2 Federal LHD
-
stugilmour - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1944
- Joined: 03 Sep 2007
John,
The tire rolling method counts turns for a certain number of tire rotations. The fewer the turns, the greater the statistical error, plus the possible error in counting the speedometer cable turns.
Using tire turns per mile give you a good fixed figure.
Of course, both of these methods have errors.
Even if the rolling method was error free, it captures a correct figure for the tyres at one point in their service life. Tyres can change by as much as 3% during their life.
Published turns per mile (even manufacturer specified values) can vary by 1% or more and, again, capture the tyre at one point in its service life.
Accurate distance measurement might be accomplished using a GPS based odometer, as long as you stay in sight of enough satellites for good accuracy. I use an iPhone app to measure distance I row or set a count down distance measurement for a fixed distance race. http://performancephones.com/speedcoach-mobile/
David
1968 36/7988
The tire rolling method counts turns for a certain number of tire rotations. The fewer the turns, the greater the statistical error, plus the possible error in counting the speedometer cable turns.
Using tire turns per mile give you a good fixed figure.
Of course, both of these methods have errors.
Even if the rolling method was error free, it captures a correct figure for the tyres at one point in their service life. Tyres can change by as much as 3% during their life.
Published turns per mile (even manufacturer specified values) can vary by 1% or more and, again, capture the tyre at one point in its service life.
Accurate distance measurement might be accomplished using a GPS based odometer, as long as you stay in sight of enough satellites for good accuracy. I use an iPhone app to measure distance I row or set a count down distance measurement for a fixed distance race. http://performancephones.com/speedcoach-mobile/
David
1968 36/7988
-
msd1107 - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 770
- Joined: 24 Sep 2003
OK I think I understand your theory now but the mind boggles at who would go to the effort of counting how many revolutions the tyre makes per mile.
Well in any case the main function of the speedometer is to ensure that whilst driving on public roads that you can be sure that you know when you are most likely exceeding the legal limit.
I think that most manufacturers calibrate their speedo's fast to ensure that they don't get tangled up in legal arguments about speeding convictions etc.
Apart from that proud owners are lead to believe that their cars are faster than they actually are
Cheers
John
Well in any case the main function of the speedometer is to ensure that whilst driving on public roads that you can be sure that you know when you are most likely exceeding the legal limit.
I think that most manufacturers calibrate their speedo's fast to ensure that they don't get tangled up in legal arguments about speeding convictions etc.
Apart from that proud owners are lead to believe that their cars are faster than they actually are
Cheers
John
Beware of the Illuminati
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
Editor: On Sunday morning, February 8th 2015, Derek "John" Pelly AKA GrumpyBodger passed away genuinely peacefully at Weston Hospicecare, Weston Super Mare. He will be missed.
-
GrUmPyBoDgEr - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2346
- Joined: 29 Oct 2004
Hi All
This is quite an old thread but I couldn't really find the answer to my problem.
I recently changed the wheels on my Sprint back to original but it seems the speedo is now reading much higher than actual. I have the green coloured gearing and see I can purchase either a blue or a black replacement - does anyone know which one would reduce the speedometer reading?
Thanks
This is quite an old thread but I couldn't really find the answer to my problem.
I recently changed the wheels on my Sprint back to original but it seems the speedo is now reading much higher than actual. I have the green coloured gearing and see I can purchase either a blue or a black replacement - does anyone know which one would reduce the speedometer reading?
Thanks
- Mrozik
- Second Gear
- Posts: 103
- Joined: 19 Feb 2020
Mrozik wrote:Hi All
This is quite an old thread but I couldn't really find the answer to my problem.
I recently changed the wheels on my Sprint back to original but it seems the speedo is now reading much higher than actual. I have the green coloured gearing and see I can purchase either a blue or a black replacement - does anyone know which one would reduce the speedometer reading?
Thanks
You need more teeth on the driven gear to slow the speedometer down, so in your case you can only go to a 25 tooth one as that's the only one left above green which are 24 teeth.
The blue ones are rarer than the others - I've just looked on Ebay and there was a new old stock one that sold for £90 plus post!
-
promotor - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 797
- Joined: 16 Mar 2012
Mrozik wrote:Many thanks for your help
John
No problem John.
Your other option if that doesn't get you where you need to be is to put a 6 tooth gear on the gearbox mainshaft, that is presuming that you have a 7 tooth gear currently fitted. There are only 6 and 7 tooth gears for the mainshaft.
-
promotor - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 797
- Joined: 16 Mar 2012
21 posts
• Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
Total Online:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 30 guests