SPEEDO anyone identify?

Author
Discussion

nigenry

Original Poster:

1 posts

146 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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Can anyone help and identify the car for this speedo ?

Krikkit

26,527 posts

181 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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Interestingly I don't get a single google hit for the SNT6210. I'd guess a Land Rover of some kind, as they use the SNT6209...

Smiths themselves might be able to give you some info: https://www.smiths-instruments.co.uk

bristolracer

5,540 posts

149 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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70 mph being the last indicated speed makes it quite old or possibly out of something commercial?

roadsmash

2,622 posts

70 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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Could it be from a motorbike?

take-good-care-of-the-forest-dewey

5,156 posts

55 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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roadsmash said:
Could it be from a motorbike?
I did wonder - chrome surround suggests so.

Certainly not a series landy - no chrome surround.

Riley Blue

20,955 posts

226 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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SNT 6211 and SNT 6212 are both Triumph cars.

FunkyNige

8,883 posts

275 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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Looks very similar to this one on an 1977 Austin FX4 taxi
https://classiccars.com/listings/view/1158016/1977...
Onlt difference is the one in the link (scroll along for the speedo picture) goes up to 80mph.

OP is SNT 6210-OOSA 880
Taxi in the link has SNT 6210/OOSA 960

Dapster

6,932 posts

180 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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bristolracer said:
70 mph being the last indicated speed makes it quite old or possibly out of something commercial?
Back in the day when the US had a blanket 55 mph limit, Mercedes used to fit a speedo that only went up to 85 in order to maximise the space used on the dial, as otherwise 3/4 of it would be redundant. Would this be a mph speedo for a US spec car for the same reason - ie one that could exceed 70?



Boosted LS1

21,187 posts

260 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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These people would probably know as they restore them.

http://www.speedograph-richfield.com/

OLDBENZ

397 posts

136 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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Dapster said:
bristolracer said:
70 mph being the last indicated speed makes it quite old or possibly out of something commercial?
Back in the day when the US had a blanket 55 mph limit, Mercedes used to fit a speedo that only went up to 85 in order to maximise the space used on the dial, as otherwise 3/4 of it would be redundant. Would this be a mph speedo for a US spec car for the same reason - ie one that could exceed 70?

Actually, the 85mph speedo was mandatory for US-market cars registered from late 1979 until some point in the eighties. 55mph (the max speed limit) had to be flagged too.


distinctivedesign

143 posts

78 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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It is from an FX4 taxi.

In the late-1980's they were given a slight facelift (new instrument fonts, symbols instead of writing for warning lamps and switches, etc). The big change was under the bonnet, where they were fitted with the (slightly) more powerful and (fractionally) more refined diesel engine. I think from memory it was a Land Rover unit. Anyway, its from one of those face-lifted models.

Dapster

6,932 posts

180 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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OLDBENZ said:
Actually, the 85mph speedo was mandatory for US-market cars registered from late 1979 until some point in the eighties. 55mph (the max speed limit) had to be flagged too.
That I never knew! beer

Mr Tidy

22,326 posts

127 months

Thursday 2nd July 2020
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Dapster said:
OLDBENZ said:
Actually, the 85mph speedo was mandatory for US-market cars registered from late 1979 until some point in the eighties. 55mph (the max speed limit) had to be flagged too.
That I never knew! beer
It applied to bikes too. I bought an early 80s Yamaha XJ550 that had been imported from the USA and the speedo stopped at 85mph.

And because of the 55mph limit Yamaha didn't bother fitting them with an oil-cooler either, or twin front disc-brakes.

But then I also bought a UK model with a seized engine and put the import engine into the UK bike and got a 120mph speedo! Even if that was a bit optimistic. laugh

Although I've no idea what that speedo came from, but I'd guess it was a BMC product.




Edited by Mr Tidy on Friday 3rd July 00:01

Bodo

12,375 posts

266 months

Sunday 5th July 2020
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distinctivedesign said:
It is from an FX4 taxi.

In the late-1980's they were given a slight facelift (new instrument fonts, symbols instead of writing for warning lamps and switches, etc). The big change was under the bonnet, where they were fitted with the (slightly) more powerful and (fractionally) more refined diesel engine. I think from memory it was a Land Rover unit. Anyway, its from one of those face-lifted models.
This sounds about right!


https://www.arnold-classic.com/oldtimerangebot/car...

Monkeylegend

26,386 posts

231 months

Sunday 5th July 2020
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shout Frank.