A car that genuinely under reports speed...
A car that genuinely under reports speed...
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Discussion

donkmeister

Original Poster:

11,553 posts

122 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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I recently had the displeasure of one of those MG-badged Chinese cars, a ZS specifically, and had an unusual experience... The speedo under reported by 1mph at ~50mph.

I was using the inbuilt satnav, which decided to crash. So, I pulled over, fired up Google maps and carried on my way. Sat on cruise at a car-reported steady 50mph, but GPS revealed my speed to be 51mph.

I didn't investigate further to see if a previous customer had played with MMI settings, but it's worth noting for those who try to maximise their use of the margins before speeding enforcement occurs!!!

poo at Paul's

14,539 posts

197 months

Monday 17th July 2023
quotequote all
donkmeister said:
I recently had the displeasure of one of those MG-badged Chinese cars, a ZS specifically, and had an unusual experience... The speedo under reported by 1mph at ~50mph.

I was using the inbuilt satnav, which decided to crash. So, I pulled over, fired up Google maps and carried on my way. Sat on cruise at a car-reported steady 50mph, but GPS revealed my speed to be 51mph.

I didn't investigate further to see if a previous customer had played with MMI settings, but it's worth noting for those who try to maximise their use of the margins before speeding enforcement occurs!!!
Have you thought about speaking to Hollywood about the screenplay?

OutInTheShed

12,930 posts

48 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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It's possible for GPS to read high.
I've seen GPS's bolted to large concrete buildings indicate a few MPH.

If the speed is rounded to 1mph, it's not exactly a big deal for one indication to be 50 and the other 51.

Most speedo's of course indicate a few MPH faster than reality.
Tyres can vary!
I had a trail bike where the speedo was programmable for different tyre sizes, like a pushbike speedo almost.

Alex_225

7,343 posts

223 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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Not come across that myself. Most I've had read under or pretty exact. My Saab 9-3 shows 65mph on GPS when set to 70mph on the cruise control.

Interested to see what replies come up, I always assumed satnav was 100% accurate.

Steve57

2,174 posts

264 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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Funny this comes up now. maybe its a glitch in the mainframe. Wife is sat on the sofa a short while ago checking traffic before her late shift and while doing so Waze tells her she is doing 60mph!!!

dhutch

17,524 posts

219 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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poo at Paul's said:
Have you thought about speaking to Hollywood about the screenplay?
My thoughts too.

1 mph deviation is surely a round effect at best?

0ddball

906 posts

161 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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With such flawless scientific methodology, I can't think of any possible alternative explanation.

Penny Whistle

6,597 posts

192 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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Alex_225 said:
I always assumed satnav was 100% accurate.
It might not be if you go through places with poor reception (concrete canyons, forests, etc). It will also work on the basis of a straight line between each "fix", so could be out on hairpins for example, while on steep hills the satnav will take no account of the slope as it merely "sees" a plan view of the terrain.

TGCOTF-dewey

7,216 posts

77 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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It does happen. My FS1E showed 62mph on the speedo and it definitely did that speed on 4 star.

Alex_225

7,343 posts

223 months

Monday 17th July 2023
quotequote all
Penny Whistle said:
Alex_225 said:
I always assumed satnav was 100% accurate.
It might not be if you go through places with poor reception (concrete canyons, forests, etc). It will also work on the basis of a straight line between each "fix", so could be out on hairpins for example, while on steep hills the satnav will take no account of the slope as it merely "sees" a plan view of the terrain.
Got you, makes sense. smile

dhutch

17,524 posts

219 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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Almost nothing is 100% accurate at all times and places.

mattyprice4004

1,339 posts

196 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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I had this - turns out the car had incorrectly sized tyres on!

QBee

22,078 posts

166 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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17 inch wheels with 225/50 17 tyres fitted., for example, will have a diameter of 656mm.
I have assumed that the tyres are brand new, so 8mm of tread.
Wear those tyres down to 2mm, and you have 12mm less diameter.
12/656 = 1.83%, at 50 mph this 0.915 mph.
So it depends for what point in the tyre life the speedo is calibrated.

Then if you stand 5 different manufacturers' brand new 225/50 17 tyres on their treads, side by side, the first thing the accurate human eye notices is that they actually vary in height by way more than 1.8%.

So you will be doing well if your speedo is dead accurate, given the variation in tyres.

But I do agree with the OP - we have grown accustomed to German cars being set to read about 3 MPH high to give a margin of safety when we are gambling on not being just 1mph into the prosecute zone in the 15 miles of 50 mph limit in our favourite motorway roadworks.

Whataguy

1,092 posts

102 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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For an apparent over read, I can get this when on hills.

You have the cruise set to a gps calibrated 50mph on the flat, but the gps readout will vary when going up and down hills.

It may appear to be over temporarily, but you are still doing the same speed on the speedometer.

Gps isn’t accurate unless on a flat level road.

FYI the worst car I had for under reading was a Toyota Audis hybrid. At an indicated 70mph you were only doing 63mph. Complained to Toyota but they said no adjustment was possible.

Tony1963

5,808 posts

184 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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Whataguy said:
For an apparent over read, I can get this when on hills.

You have the cruise set to a gps calibrated 50mph on the flat, but the gps readout will vary when going up and down hills.

It may appear to be over temporarily, but you are still doing the same speed on the speedometer.

Gps isn’t accurate unless on a flat level road.

FYI the worst car I had for under reading was a Toyota Audis hybrid. At an indicated 70mph you were only doing 63mph. Complained to Toyota but they said no adjustment was possible.
That’s over-reading.

And might be explained by you hybridising an Audi with a Toyota?

smile

ingenieur

4,643 posts

203 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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I tend to find on Mercedes that the speedo does not begin to under-read until you pass 50mph. That's on a few different mercs. I've also seen it on a BMW. At 50mph barely any divergence, by the time you get to 60mph some significant difference starts showing... from there the divergence increases exponentially.

Could be the manufacturers policy and that it might be different from one to the other. Could be typical of the country where the car is produced... say it is like this in all German cars for instance.

QBee

22,078 posts

166 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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My Nissan X Trail over-reads by 10%, so an indicated 77 is actually 70.

I am supposed to be a responsible senior manager, so whenever I have a member of staff in the passenger seat I have to explain this to them, or they think I am driving ike a lunatic. Not helped by the speedo being dead centre of the dash. Why they did that I have no idea, I can only think that the designer liked symmetry.

I suspect the previous owner either put smaller wheels on or downsized the tyres..

Edited by QBee on Tuesday 18th July 09:44

DD3566

99 posts

96 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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My Monaro VXR with stock 19" wheels would also under-estimate speed. GPS would be showing 70mph while the speedo was showing 66mph! Quite a margin of error in the wrong direction

KAgantua

5,089 posts

153 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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My Nissan Terrano II always overreads, i.e. at 90 mph it is really doing about 73 or so...

MustangGT

13,655 posts

302 months

Tuesday 18th July 2023
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ingenieur said:
I tend to find on Mercedes that the speedo does not begin to under-read until you pass 50mph. That's on a few different mercs. I've also seen it on a BMW. At 50mph barely any divergence, by the time you get to 60mph some significant difference starts showing... from there the divergence increases exponentially.

Could be the manufacturers policy and that it might be different from one to the other. Could be typical of the country where the car is produced... say it is like this in all German cars for instance.
All 3 of the Mercedes we have had have been consistent in over-reading by 1.5 mph through to about 50, then 2 mph from there on up to slightly illegal speeds.