prb51
Luke Skywalker
Offline
In another thread I mentioned I was going to get my Speed recalibrated to match the Toyota 5 speed.
I did the 52'9.5" test (1/100th mile) watching the speedo cable turn and after a few runs figured the speedo tunrned 10.5 (1050)times in that distance (tape flag on cable). The stock number is 1180 as marked on the speedo face.
I sent my speedo to Morris at West Valley Instruments in Reseda, Ca as suggested by a web member.
The speedo came back looking great although it looked pretty good to begin with so can't say I sent a beat up unit and it came back looking new....sitting next to my tach (which looks good) it only looks a little 'crisper' but the reset unit looks 100% better covered in rubber with a new brass knob. Like I said it looks great but I didn't test his 'artistic' skills.
He recalibrated both the speed and odo.
I also sent my cable (his recommendation) and he gutted it and put new innards in (sent the old back)...the cable was almost new from the major supplier but was too loose (lack of resistance) and the end was too long on the speedo side which can cause internal drag/bounce within the speedo.
The unit works flawlessly...if the car is moving the speedo is registering and very smoothly. There is absolutely no bounce just a gentle sweep as in an electronic unit and minor rpm adjustments are instantly registered.
In 4th gear the speedo and tach sweep as one and 60mph is 3k rpm.
Really nicely done and I suspect the cable had something to do with the smooth operation.
The cable was an additional $20 but well worth it.
His prices are competative with the other rebuilders as they were all within $5 of each other if the unit was basically sound and needed a basic rebuild (mine did not register any speed until above 10mph and was off in mph even before the tranny change).
He had the unit for 10 days including shipping from his end.
https://i216.photobucket.com/albums/cc138/prb51/DSC01229.jpg
https://i216.photobucket.com/albums/cc138/prb51/DSC01228.jpg
I did the 52'9.5" test (1/100th mile) watching the speedo cable turn and after a few runs figured the speedo tunrned 10.5 (1050)times in that distance (tape flag on cable). The stock number is 1180 as marked on the speedo face.
I sent my speedo to Morris at West Valley Instruments in Reseda, Ca as suggested by a web member.
The speedo came back looking great although it looked pretty good to begin with so can't say I sent a beat up unit and it came back looking new....sitting next to my tach (which looks good) it only looks a little 'crisper' but the reset unit looks 100% better covered in rubber with a new brass knob. Like I said it looks great but I didn't test his 'artistic' skills.
He recalibrated both the speed and odo.
I also sent my cable (his recommendation) and he gutted it and put new innards in (sent the old back)...the cable was almost new from the major supplier but was too loose (lack of resistance) and the end was too long on the speedo side which can cause internal drag/bounce within the speedo.
The unit works flawlessly...if the car is moving the speedo is registering and very smoothly. There is absolutely no bounce just a gentle sweep as in an electronic unit and minor rpm adjustments are instantly registered.
In 4th gear the speedo and tach sweep as one and 60mph is 3k rpm.
Really nicely done and I suspect the cable had something to do with the smooth operation.
The cable was an additional $20 but well worth it.
His prices are competative with the other rebuilders as they were all within $5 of each other if the unit was basically sound and needed a basic rebuild (mine did not register any speed until above 10mph and was off in mph even before the tranny change).
He had the unit for 10 days including shipping from his end.
https://i216.photobucket.com/albums/cc138/prb51/DSC01229.jpg
https://i216.photobucket.com/albums/cc138/prb51/DSC01228.jpg
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 