Just so I understand, my speedo is an anolog, I believe mechanical one, not a digital electronic one. Does this make a difference or is it still in the ECU?
Help with Speedometer adjustment.
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by mackdaknyfe, May 9, 2010.
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ECU stands for "Electronic Control Unit"....so you might need a new cable.
Or you could just buy a new truck and not worry about the piddle stuff!!! -
I'm always good at throwing wrenches into the works. Of course that's where I put in the "I believe" mechanical part. It could be electronic analog but I really don't know.
Thanks again. -
the ecu or ecm is where most of the trucks speedos are done. like otherhalfw said reflash for tire size rear ratio and so on.
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Thanks. I will get a shop to look at it. The one I had talked to didn't know and was honest about not knowing. I will check with one that does.
Thanks again,
Mack -
Just a thought, if the truck was spec'd 5% off, the warrenty would expire 5% sooner.
If this has been this way since new, my truck should have 707,500 miles instead of the 745,000 it has. That adds up to a lot of mileage tax if I was driving in my home state of Oregon.
It also means my fuel mileage really isn't the 6.5 that I think I'm getting it will be 5% lower.
If I was into conspiracy theories I would think the truck builders would do this intentionally. They could say their trucks are getting X mpgs when they are actually getting X-5%. -
You can use a handheld or laptop, and change the tire revolutions per mile settings, which will change the speedo. I changed mine a couple times until it got as close as possible. Not 100%, but real close.
Almost all speedos are fast. I think it is to run warranty out sooner. -
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The dip switches is what adjusts it. Go to the dealer and pretend to buy a new speedo. In the box is a piece of paper telling you the correct pattern for them switches to match your truck setup. You probably have one or two switches in the wrong position. Someone probably put different size tires on that truck. They are similar to them switches in garage opener remotes. Piece of cake.
Most trucks I ever been in reads 2 mph over according to my GPS and the construction speed limit signs. My new truck is set at 65 but reads 67.
DOT regs require speedometers to be accurate within +/- 5mph. So you're okay there.
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