Sorry to all if what I said sounded confusing in my last email. It was late and I was tired. What I intended to say appears to be the exact opposite of what I actually said.

I was trying to say was that I've never found a Speedo that would have me travelling faster than the speed it displays. In other words, it displays a faster speed than the GPS by 3 - 5% and in my experience, if you follow the Speedo you will always be travelling slower than it indicates.

Ian


----- Original Message ----- From: "Allan Armistead" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia." <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2005 2:52 PM
Subject: [Aus-soaring] Off topic - speedo accuracy



I'd like to ask for the indulgence of the group to go a bit off topic to
gliding.

Those of you who are also members of NRMA might have seen a letter (and
editorial comment) in their last edition about speedo accuracy.

As it relates to an area of interest of mine (roads/road safety) I'm
intending to respond on the matter and thought it would be useful to do a
straw poll of people who have the ability to "calibrate" their speedos, to
get a reasonable idea of the order of accuracy across a range of makes and
models. I know both my cars are optimistic by around 6-8km/h at highway
speeds.

So who better to ask than people who have access to speed measuring
equipment (GPS) and drive a range of vehicles on the highways and byways
(glider pilots).

If anyone is interested in giving me some input into this, I would ask you
to do the following - safely, on a quiet road, at legal speeds and with a
passenger to read the GPS;

. drive at steady speeds of 80, 100 and (if possible/legal) 110km/h as
indicated on your vehicle speedo,

. note the GPS reading at each of these indicated speeds

. tabulate the results, together with the make, model and year model of the
vehicle,


. email them direct to me at [EMAIL PROTECTED] (please do not clog up the
newsgroup with the results)

Apart from my specific interest in the matter, it is useful information to
have for your own purposes. Australian Design Rules require a speedo
accuracy of +-10%. My experience/observation is that speedos are generally a
bit optimistic, but it is quite possible that if you are reading 100km/h you
are actually doing somewhere between 90 and 110 - which could be important
to know if you are in Victoria with it's 3km/h tolerance level.


Allan Armistead
ph (02) 6249 6470, fax (02) 6249 6555, mobile 0413 013 911
PO Box 908, Dickson ACT 2602, Australia

"When once you have tasted flight, you will always walk with your eyes
turned skyward, for there you have been and there you always will be."
Leonardo da Vinci, 1452-1519

/listinfo/aus-soaring



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