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That matches with my own observations. It's actually the most accurate speedometer I've ever had on a motorcycle. It's off 2-3mph at 65 and about 5mph at 90. 67-68 is 65 and 90 is 85. 3% is pretty darn good for a bike.
The calibration for the wheel size must be in there somewhere. Let's see, if you wore 1/4" of tread off of a wheel that had a radius of 13 inches, for example, that would be a change of (.25/13)x100 = 1.9, or roughly 2 percent. So the 3 percent you are concerned about, if corrected, could be thrown off substantially by tire wear. (Pulses per mile sent to the speedometer is proportional to tire circumference, which is proportional to diameter and radius.) Probably an even more important influence on the effective radius is tire inflation pressure.I agree that the 3 percent error is negligible and that correcting it for your current tire diameter would be of little long term benefit.But it would be fun to be able to do it. (I found out how to do it for my Italjet a while ago.)Moto
... The 5 miles difference from 125 to an actual 130 miles will make quite a deference over several thousand miles.
Fortunately the error is > actual or we'd all be without a licence.
I was curious so I tried setting the cruise control at 100mph. Yup, you can set it at 100mph. I�m pretty sure my license isn�t safe whether I�m riding the 1400 or a moped.
I have not found (nor bothered to look, to be brutally honest) for any speed correction values in the map. It may not exist,
The way to do it is to note the percentage difference between actual and indicated speed. Multiply the speedo correction value by the percentage difference, then reduce the correction value by the result. I always reduced the correction value by about 95% of the difference, to be sure that indicated speed was less than actual. I didn't want people going faster than indicated. I've had to do it for the 1200 Sport quite a few times. The error on the front wheel sensor was often woeful.
So this is something that's done through the laptop connected to theECU if a bike is off considerably and fairly simple to make the adjustments?
All of these inaccuracies - speed, distance, tire size, gearing, etc - are moot with a GPS speedometer.