1961-1967 are exact same speedo.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Peter Perez
Sent: Wednesday, June 30, 2010 4:43 PM
To: Air-Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List
Subject: Re: [vintagvw] Speedometer or cable?

It is 4/66. Is there a lot of difference between 65-66?





________________________________
From: Bill May <[email protected]>
To: Air-Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, June 29, 2010 2:53:32 PM
Subject: Re: [vintagvw] Speedometer or cable?

What month on the 66 model year speedo? I have a 10/65 or 11/65

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Peter Perez
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 1:21 PM
To: Air-Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List
Subject: Re: [vintagvw] Speedometer or cable?

Hi Bert,
I had the same thing happen on my 66. An occasional grinding/squeaking sound
that had the speedo needle bouncing in rhythm. I would wiggle the speedo
cable, loosen then tighten the barrel connector at the speedo thinking it
was the cable. Then one day while watching the needle bounce the sound
stopped and the needle dropped to zero. Changed the cable and still nothing.
Took the old cable, hooked it up to a drill and watched it spin on the other
end ok. Hooked it up to the speedo and nothing. So I've deduced my speedo
broke. Now I just need to find a good used 66 t1speedometer.
-pete
Fairfield, CA




________________________________
From: Bert Knupp <[email protected]>
To: Air-Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, June 29, 2010 10:52:50 AM
Subject: [vintagvw] Speedometer or cable?

Volks,

My '70 has developed a noise in the speedometer.  It's intermittent, of
course, and can't always perform on cue, but when it occurs, it issues a
"chud chud chudchudchudchud" noise that keeps time with the wheel revs.  It
might stop for a few minutes, then mysteriously resume for no apparent
reason.

The speedometer needle is generally pretty stable, but occasionally it goes
into wild gyrations, then settles down again.  It seems to show a pretty
accurate speed (just gauging by the feel -- it reads in km/h), or at least
to average a fairly accurate reading if it's doing its dance.  I replaced
the buffer resistor, but there was no effect. (Full disclosure:  The
replacement was also very old.)

I dread tearing stuff out to gain access to the back of my speedo again, but
when I do, I'd like to know whether I'm going to encounter something minor
(a tube of cable lubricant) or major (a removal/rebuild of the unit).  The
cable and speedometer are both 40 years old.

Does anybody recognize the symptoms I've described?  What might I be in for?

Bert Knupp in Music City USA

    |__n__
    (_____)º
   (Ô\_|_/Ô)
    ü °   ° ü
Polizeikäfer '70


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