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#41
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You could always go flying through a school or construction zone with the cruise control set to about 95. Then a police officer can give you your actual speed in a fraction such as 95/30(if your tire size is dead on).
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#42
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I asked a buddy of mine to borrow his GPS to test this over the weekend. He turned around and bought me one for my b-day yesterday.
![]() How accurate can I expect the GPS to be. I haven't had much time to test yet...or driving distance rather, but I tested it over a 5 mile commute to work this morning, and it's almost dead on with my TS set to 2575. The analog speedometer gauge was consistently over approx 2mph in comparison to speed on the GPS. Anyways, just wondering if you guys think that using a GPS is one the more accurate ways of checking distance....in comparison to mile markers, google maps, etc. |
#43
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Wow! Sounds like you have a good buddy!
I think the GPS will be VERY accurate. I'd say the figures you're describing now show you have the TS nailed. The analog gauge is reading right where I'd expect it to be, and if the Gryphon and the GPS match, that's as good as you're going to get it. - Jack |
#44
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I realized that my TomTom GPS does not have a standard odometer. The only way I can confirm distance is to plan a route and see what the total distance is to the destination. For instance, if my route says it's going to be 25 miles from A to B, my odometer is accurate if it is showing 25 miles when I hit my "exact" destination, or when the remaining mileage on the GPS hits 0. However, I've been told there is an approximate 5% leeway with the GPS, as the mileage adjusts and may vary over the entire route distance. The other night, I ran 22.8 miles (according to the GPS). When I hit 0 on the GPS, my truck odometer was at 23.3, a .5 mile discrepancy. This tells me that with a TS of 2275, I am slightly over. However, it was weird when watching the GPS, becuase it seemed to be dead on, i.e every click down on the GPS, there was a simultaneous click up on my odometer. A few times during the ride, this sequence must have varied, but visually, it was unnoticeable without keeping my eyes on it the entire time. I did however watch both readings for over 2 miles straight with no variability. ![]() Any advice on this??? Thanks in advance ![]() |
#45
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I use a garmine like the one Jack's got.
It has a speedometer in it which has proven to be a good approximation of the trucks mph.
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SENIOR MODERATOR--PTLA God doesn't have a Facebook but he's my friend. God doesn't have a twitter, but I follow him. |
#46
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My TomTom has speed. Show I should compare speed on the GPS with speed on the Gryphon, right? Not speed on the analog gauge.
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#47
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I can't comment on your Tom Tom, because I don't have one. Mine's a Garmin hiking GPS and it measures both current speed and elapsed distance. I just sat it up on the dashboard and confirmed the speed. The position accuracy is within 10-16 feet (WAAS enabled) and the steady state velocity accuracy is 0.05 meters/sec which is about 0.1 MPH if I converted properly.
Regardless, I suspect your GPS measurement is pretty close too. When I apply the error to your TS figure: 22.8/23.3 X 2575 = 2520, which is VERY close to the original 2522 figure that you started out with, and which I still think is closer to the right value. Honestly, I'd put in 2522 and call it good enough until you get some data that PROVES otherwise. Edit: Guess I was slow in giving you an answer. Compare your Tom Tom's speed with the Gryphon's speed. - Jack |
#48
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#49
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My favorite method is the "3 roll" method. This has always proven to be extremely accurate and takes into full account for tire pressure, tread depth, and any tire squish.
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Bill Cohron - The Mad Doctor ![]() ![]() ![]() Power Hungry Performance - The ORIGINAL in Ford performance tuning... Since 1997! (678) 890-1110 www.gopowerhungry.com - Home of the Hydra Chip, Minotaur Tuning Software, and the new Orion Reflash System for Navistar! Bring back ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Much to my surprise, I'm actually quite enjoying Linux! ![]() |
#50
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According to my GPS, I'm over on my odometer approximately 4 miles over a 140 mile ride.....and the speed on the GPS was consistently 1 to 2 mph fast on the Gryphon compared to the GPS. HOWEVER, the mile markers on the interstate made it seems like I was a little under on the odometer!!! I'm going to trust my GPS on this one and scale the TS back I think.
BTW Jack...regarding my shifting issue we spoke about in the other thread, I've confirmed that it's only when there is load on the truck. I had to come up some hills to get to my parents house tonight. On an incline, every shift from 1 to 2 was rough and there was a physical "bump" present from the rear end. I'm not sure if I want to play with the settings on the Gryphon to fix or let my mechanic feel it. Appreciate your write-up though in case I decide to play with it myself. |
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