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			#11  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  Re: Speedometer Gear Reducer 
			
			Ths is the formula I used. Kurt <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">First off, the way to get the whole system to work right is to make the speed cable rotate 1,000 revolutions for every mile the car is driven. This is done by adjusting the transmission driven to drive gear ratio on the speed cable to match the tire size and rear axle gear ratio of the car. The first thing to know is how many revolutions the tires make in one mile. To calculate this, measure the diameter of your tires. 26" is about average for F60-15's or 245-60-15's. Multiply this measurement (26"  by pi (3.1416). This will give you the circumference of the tire. Next, divide one mile in inches (63360) by the circumference of tire (63360 divided by (26 x pi)=776). This equals the revs per mile of the tire. Now multiply this number by the rear axle ratio to give you the number of drive shaft revs per mile (776 x 3.91= 3033). Next, divide this number by 1000 (3033 divided by 1000 = 3.033). This is the ratio of transmission driven/drive gears on speedometer cable you will need in this case use a driven gear with 18 teeth and a drive gear with 6 teeth (18 divided by 6 = 3.0). This is the best choice which yields a 1.1% high error which means your odometer unit indicates 1.1% greater than actual or 10.11 for an actual 10.0 miles. If you are using the Ford adapter/reducer (reducer was factory equipped on cars with 3.91, 4.11 or 4.30 rear axle ratios), multiply the number by 0.75 (3.033 x 0.75=2.274). This is the driven/drive ratio you need. A 3.75% error (i.e., a 0.375 mile error in 10 miles) is considered acceptable by design.</div></div> 
				__________________  1969 SS396 Post Sedan Delivered to Van-T Topeka KS MCACN Day2 Concourse Gold Award 1965 VW El Lobo Dune Buggy built in the mid 70’s for the Iowa Shriners 1968 Schwinn Orange Krate 1969 Schwinn Pea Picker 1968 Schwinn 5-Speed 1970 Schwinn 3-Speed Deluxe 1972 Schwinn 10-Speed Continental 1973 Schwinn 5-Speed Suburban All Original Paint Bikes | 
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			#12  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  Re: Speedometer Gear Reducer 
			
			Damn......i got the slide rule out.....and got the same thing! 
				__________________ Eddie M Camaro-less 87 El Camino SS Few Ferrari's | 
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			#13  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  Re: Speedometer Gear Reducer 
			
			Ed are you still carrying that slide rule in your shirt pocket??? 
				__________________ Mark | 
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			#14  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  Re: Speedometer Gear Reducer 
			
			I moved it to my back pocket - more room for the pens up front! 
				__________________ Eddie M Camaro-less 87 El Camino SS Few Ferrari's | 
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			#15  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  Re: Speedometer Gear Reducer 
				__________________ Martin Foltz 68 Camaro SS-396 L35/M20, Corvette Bronze, black vinyl top George Olsen Chevrolet San Francisco | 
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			#16  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  Re: Speedometer Gear Reducer 
			
			<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 69 Post Sedan</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Ths is the formula I used. Kurt <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">First off, the way to get the whole system to work right is to make the speed cable rotate 1,000 revolutions for every mile the car is driven. This is done by adjusting the transmission driven to drive gear ratio on the speed cable to match the tire size and rear axle gear ratio of the car. The first thing to know is how many revolutions the tires make in one mile. To calculate this, measure the diameter of your tires. 26" is about average for F60-15's or 245-60-15's. Multiply this measurement (26"  by pi (3.1416). This will give you the circumference of the tire. Next, divide one mile in inches (63360) by the circumference of tire (63360 divided by (26 x pi)=776). This equals the revs per mile of the tire. Now multiply this number by the rear axle ratio to give you the number of drive shaft revs per mile (776 x 3.91= 3033). Next, divide this number by 1000 (3033 divided by 1000 = 3.033). This is the ratio of transmission driven/drive gears on speedometer cable you will need in this case use a driven gear with 18 teeth and a drive gear with 6 teeth (18 divided by 6 = 3.0). This is the best choice which yields a 1.1% high error which means your odometer unit indicates 1.1% greater than actual or 10.11 for an actual 10.0 miles. If you are using the Ford adapter/reducer (reducer was factory equipped on cars with 3.91, 4.11 or 4.30 rear axle ratios), multiply the number by 0.75 (3.033 x 0.75=2.274). This is the driven/drive ratio you need. A 3.75% error (i.e., a 0.375 mile error in 10 miles) is considered acceptable by design.</div></div> </div></div>Okay, my tranny driven/drive gears ratio is 2.817, is there a chart to look at to find the correct or as close at possible gears for calibration? 
				__________________ Bob If I can't smoke the tires, I want more! 76 Nova 07 Chevy Silverado 05 Yamaha VStar 1100 | 
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