New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Xlratr..Did you happen to read this post ?
Question, If it's on the centerstand, key on, not running and as you rotate the rear wheel by hand and run up through the gears does the indicator show properly? Paul B
Yep. I replied on 11. December.
No, it does not display anything but neutral with the key on, but I just reinstalled the rear wheel after fixing a flat so there may be something else involved with that. Will report back after I take a ride.
After a quick spin around the block, it doesn't display anything other than neutral with the engine off.
Hmm..Dunno mate, but I’m gunna’ get up, take a piss and wander out to have a look.Keep asking diagnostic based questions, I love ‘em.Another thing ..If you have an unmolested system on your V85 that works and you change to a different tyre and do a recalibration, you do not inherit a gear position indicator problem.Now why is that ?After all, when you alter your tyre size, all the sensor knows is that you’ve changed the pulses per second and a recalibration brings it all back to normal. All I did from the point of view of the CPU is to do the same thing... The waters are becoming muddied here for me.Unless some miracle occurs, I’m going to have to make a front one. Now everything is set up tooling wise, it’s probably about 8 hours..I just thought I was more or less finished..
The gearing is the ratio of the engine speed to the rear wheel speed, and by just changing the tyre size you don't change that. The ABS and traction control need to know about the actual speed, so they need re-calibrationI suspect that you may be out of luck with fixing the gearing unless there is a "re-calibration" for that (as items like the Healtech unit have).Congrats, by the way.Gonzo
I don’t recall suggesting that the bike has to be moving to indicate a gear selection.If y’all have a look at the bottom shot in post #184, you’ll see that with the bike on the centrestand and the rear wheel turning, the gear indicator correctly shows 1st gear.In this case the bike knows it’s stationary because the front wheel is still.Oddly though, why does the TC allow this condition, how does it know that I’m not doing a burnout in the grass and prevent me ?I tried to spin the rear wheel the other day in the grass and was understandably prevented by the TC.
Too bad the gear indication is not working.Since it works by comparing the ratio of engine speed to wheel pulse rateYou have increased the wheel pulse rateJust as an experiment try slipping the clutch a little to change the ratio back.I'm not suggesting this as a fix but it might be enough to move the indication to 6Would it then move back to 5 when you let the clutch out or is there enough differential in the calc to stay on 6?
If the selected gear is deduced by comparing engine rpm to rear wheel rotation, why does the gear number not change if you pull in the clutch in say, third at 4,00 revs and let the rpm drop so that you have a lower rpm for the same rear wheel speed?
Because the ECU may understand that you pulled in the clutch. It does monitor that voltage. And it's only one additional "if clause" in the program needed to check the clutch status before changing its mind about what gear you're in.By the way, I didn't pay any attention to this thread until yesterday. Quite impressive!Moto
I'm not sure the ECU crunches the numbers for the gear indicator. The Cali 1400 has a gear position gizmo on the gearbox, as does the Aprilia RSV4. Mayhap the 7SM doesn't have code required. It's possible the V85 dash does all the crunching for the gear indicator. We don't know what data is transmitted over the CAN bus, so would wait until you've got the front tone wheel in before you give up hope.
Just in the interests of gathering information..Does anyone know how the system gathers the reading for the tachometer?
Phase sensor -> ECU -> Dash
Disappointing.Though I see that the new rear tone wheel could be responsible for the too-low trip odometer value, I have one question that I didn't see answered: Was the trip odometer measurement essentially accurate with the original tone wheel? Moto
Interesting results, I would think the offsets would have fallen in the six percent category, but it could come back in line with another tone wheel if the computer sees similar rotation for normal operation. Nothing to lose at this point except some steel and labor. My $.02 Paul B
Ah, I forgot to mention that. If you adjust the number of pulses for the Speedo by 6%, then the odometer will read 6% less. There's only one source for the signal so you have to choose what's more important to you. Speedo accuracy or odometer accuracy. From the factory, the odometer is usually quite accurate, but the Speedo intentionally reads too high. Trouble is, they depend on the same input. (Assuming the V85 works the same as the 5AM ECU)
Just sayin'. ;-)