Try this! I had my TD speedo re-calibrated bt Nisonger after I put in a 5 speed, the speedo is now spot on.
UNIVERSITY MOTORS PRESS
SPEEDOMETER CALIBRATION
The speedometer and odometer are calibrated by the number of turns per mile that the speedo cable makes. MG TD speedometers are calibrated at about 1500 turns per mile; MGAs at about 1400; Midgets about 1300; MGBs about 1200. Finally, in 1974, all MG speedometers were calibrated at 1000 turns per mile.
Whenever the tires, wheels, differential, or gearbox is changed, a complementary change must be made in the calibration of the speedometer to assure accuracy.
The odometer is gear driven; it either works or it does not. The speedometer is driven by springs and magnets and loses its accuracy over a period of time.
To calibrate the speedometer it is necessary to determine the speedo cable’s turns per mile. In practice, it is not necessary to traverse one mile; 1/100 of a mile will do just fine.
This is a three person job – one pushes, one steers, and the third counts turns of the cable.
Measure off 1/100 of a mile – that’s 52.80 feet, or 52 feet, 9 and 5/8 inches. Mark the beginning and end with a line.
Fix a wire to the back bumper, allowing it to drop vertically and just skim the ground.
Disconnect the speedo cable from the back of the speedo and pull it as far as possible from under the dash.
Fit the cable through the center of a timing wheel – a holed disc used to set up camshaft timing – showing 360 degrees in single degree increments.
Wrap a piece of masking tape around the inner cable, allowing a “flag” or extension of several inches.
Push the car to the start line (if you overrun the line, back up the car 10 feet and come at the line again, or the cable will have slack).
Rotate the timing disc until the flag points at zero degrees.
Push the car to the finish line.
Now the person counting will have counted the turns (for instance 13) plus a partial turn, say 194 degrees. Calculate the decimal equivalent of the partial turn:
194
---- = 0.538 = 0.54
360
Therefore the cable has turned 13.54 turns for 1/100 of a mile, or 1354 turns for a mile.
Make this measurement three times and average the trials!
Send your speedometer to Bob at Nisonger Instruments, Mamaroneck, New York with the turns per mile you have measured with your gearbox, your differential, your wheels, and your tires, and Bob will return to you a speedometer that will accurately indicate the mph with a working, accurate odometer.
Nisonger Instruments
570 Mamaroneck Ave.
Mamaroneck, New York
10543 U.S.A.
914-381-1786 fax
email
info@nisonger.com
www.nisonger.com