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Sat Nav Says 69 Mph, Car Speedo Says 71 Mph. Which One Is Right?
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sat nav says 69 mph, car speedo says 71 mph. which one is right? could i be done for speeding?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sat Nav is correct. Speedos must not under-read, so are usually set to over-read by a small percent.
The diameter of a worn tyre is about 6mm less than that of a new tyre. The speedo only knows how many RPM the wheels are doing; it has no knowledge of how far the car travels with one revolution of the wheels - it calculates it from an assumed wheel diameter and the RPM. Therefore, as the tyres wear the accuracy of the speedo will vary.
The diameter of a worn tyre is about 6mm less than that of a new tyre. The speedo only knows how many RPM the wheels are doing; it has no knowledge of how far the car travels with one revolution of the wheels - it calculates it from an assumed wheel diameter and the RPM. Therefore, as the tyres wear the accuracy of the speedo will vary.
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I agre. The Sat Nav MUST be more accurate.
A Sat Nav measures your movement across the ground.
A speedo makes a bit of a pi calculation based on a presumed radius and circumference of your wheel + tyre.
Think of it this way ...
If you skid at 70mph, with your brakes on, your speedo will think that you have stopped because the wheels are not turning.
Your Sat Nav will know that you are still moving.
A Sat Nav measures your movement across the ground.
A speedo makes a bit of a pi calculation based on a presumed radius and circumference of your wheel + tyre.
Think of it this way ...
If you skid at 70mph, with your brakes on, your speedo will think that you have stopped because the wheels are not turning.
Your Sat Nav will know that you are still moving.
You are never going to get done for speeding if you are doing 71 in a 70 limit, or 31 in a 30 limit.
The police know that most speedos in cars are inaccurate and a good lawyer could easily prove that the person doing 71 was probably doing under 70.
So the police only book someone if they are doing well over the figure, say 75/76 in a 70 limit, or 35/36 in a 30 limit.
The police know that most speedos in cars are inaccurate and a good lawyer could easily prove that the person doing 71 was probably doing under 70.
So the police only book someone if they are doing well over the figure, say 75/76 in a 70 limit, or 35/36 in a 30 limit.
Sat Navs only calculate your position on the earth about every 2 seconds and work out your speed from the distance moved since the last calculation, hence an average speed as opposed to the instantaneous speed of a speedo.
It gives you the interesting situation where, if you could drive VERY quickly in a circle, so that you were back where you started from 2 seconds ago, the sat nav would give your speed as zero. (back-of envelope calculation - about 100mph on a 100ft diameter circle). Anyone going to give it a try?
It gives you the interesting situation where, if you could drive VERY quickly in a circle, so that you were back where you started from 2 seconds ago, the sat nav would give your speed as zero. (back-of envelope calculation - about 100mph on a 100ft diameter circle). Anyone going to give it a try?
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