![]() |
The Amazing 1/2 speed speedometer!
Now...here's a perplexing problem:
Recently, while traveling at slightly extra-legal speeds [;)] on the open highway, my speedometer suddenly dropped to zero. Everything else worked fine- just now I had no speedometer. And I had the distinct odor of frying electrical wires for a few moments. I pulled over, checked the fuse panel and the fuse for the speedometer itself, and found nothing. When I got home, I pulled the instrument cluster out of the pod and lifted out the speedometer; there was a resistor on the circuit board at the back which was charred and the board itself was slightly burned. Ok, the car is 22 years old; it happens. New [used] speedometer from 928 International, a reputable supplier, $150. Installed yesterday...and though it works, it displays HALF speed! That's right: 1400 rpm in 5th gear = 40 mph, but my gauge reads about 20 mph. The car is an '85, and the speedometer is for an '85-'86 car. Hmm. Any ideas? The speedometer works by counting the number of times the rear axle shafts rotate per minute, via an electrical impulse that is triggered from a wheel attached to the differential. My car is a gray market car from Austria known as an S2, whereas the gauge was obviously from an American-spec car due to the metric inner speedometer. The American cars have a different, higher rear-end ratio, but that makes no difference. Their rear wheels rotate the same number of times per mile as my car's does. :confused: |
Sounds like you may have a short in the gage board. Being that the car stays in a salt water enviroment, it could be as simple as corrosion on the copper contacts on the board. You might consider removing the pod to clean all the contactss and while in there you may also consider upgrading your pod lights and gage bezels at the same time. A buddy of mine recently did this with his Euro because of gage gremlins and has had no problems since. The upgrade to the gages is a really nice touch. He went with the kit from Jager.
|
Quote:
What perplexes me is that when I pulled the speedo and replaced it with a known good instrument...it read HALF. Not full, not twice, not nothing at all.... half. Hmm... a 340 mph speedometer? Maybe in the 727 that I fly for Fedex [NOT; a bit slow...] or a land speed car. But it doesn't work for me! Now; How does the speedometer work? |
Maybe it was other "bad" part that toasted your old speedo and not a direct failure of the speedo itself?
|
Quote:
::slides a Stella Artois to Jimmy:: N! |
do you still have the remains of the resistor that burned up on the old speedometer? Long shot but it's possible that if it's in a part of the circuit that does the "counting" then the new resistor could be a different value, and resistors are common in 1/2 increments..1k, 2k, etc. Just a thought...
Also, perhaps a newbie stupid answer here, but my '81 has an 85mph speedo, but there is also a 140mph version..i don't know how long those two options continued, but perhaps you could have 85 mph speedo guts with 140mph face? |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:33 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website