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Speedometer Theory
I am a bit confused about how our speedometer reads. After some playing around in the snow, I have observed a few things:
1) Speed apparently isn't read by transmission speed or the rear wheels, cause I can spin them or lock them and the speedometer won't read. 2) It doesn't read from the front wheels either, cause you can lock them while moving, slide, and the speedo still reads. I had always thought speed was determined from a cable from the trans, but maybe not? 91 S5 NA. I don't have ABS, which is usually the other way cars read speed. Can anyone enlighten me on the operation, I'm just curious and its bugging me. On another note, my S5 handles like a charm in the snow, predictable, responsive, and hooks damn well, even when the temp is 10*F. |
uh.. clarify #1. because the speedo cable plugs into the trans.
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And it is driven by a plastic worm gear.
"1) Speed apparently isn't read by transmission speed or the rear wheels, cause I can spin them or lock them and the speedometer won't read." If there are moments that it wont read when you are rolling then you have a defective gear. They are plastic and its not uncommon for this to happen, I have replaced two. Easy replacement, just one 6mm bolt. Edit: that or a defective and/or loose cable. |
I say its not read by the transmission because while doing donuts (and spinning the rear wheels much faster than I was actually going) the speedometer isn't reading going any faster. Also, while going about 20mph through a parking lot, and pressing in the clutch and pulling the e-brake to lock the rear wheels, and effectively the transmission, the speedo still read my doing 20 at first and slowly decreasing to 0 when I had actually stopped.
That is what has me confused. I know my speedo is off by 5mph, but im not sure this is normal, or would be normal for a defective cable/worm gear |
Your speedo is fucked.
I run my car on the dyno (both DynoJet and DynaPack), and my stock speedo has no problem showing speed even though the vehicle is sitting in one place. -Ted |
or maybe you're only locking one wheel when you pull the ebrake.
with an open diff, the speedo could stay the sameish speed while sliding around. one wheel slow + one wheel fast, speedo will see the average of the two. |
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will still have at least one wheel turning and it will slow down gradually which is exactly what your seeing with the speedo. |
Doesnt the ebrake grab on both wheels. On ice i wouldnt think it were hard to lock both. As for speeilding up only one wheel, when im sliding sideways, I kinda assume im spinning both much faster than i am actually going. I guess this just means my cable is barely alive? I guess ill change it come spring time.
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whilst sliding with an open diff, only one tire is spinning (usually). power goes to the tire with the least amount of traction, which would be the spinning one.
when the tires are going different speeds, the driveshaft spins at an average of the two (divided by 4.1 obviously). if one wheel is going 10mph and the other is going 50mph, the speedo will read 30mph. |
I completely understand what you are saying, however in 2nd gear at about 5k rpms, and the speedo still reads 10mph? I guess my real question was answered, my speedo and cable or something is screwed up.
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I think you're just overcomplicating the whole thing by talking just about sliding...
Find a nice water puddle... Brake stand the bitch. What does your speedo do? -Ted |
Did that this morning on the ice patch at the bottom of the driveway, Speedo doesn't climb unless i really begin to move.
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Well call me crazy, but now, since i began my commute this morning, its acting as you would expect, correctly. Wtf? Im not sure whats up, but apparently nothing is wrong anymore.
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