Above post is very common sense.
Anyone ever noticed that the speedo errors almost always mean that you are doing less tan you thought you are?
I had a Gilera Runner a few years back. Two stoke monster scooter. It had a speedo that was reading 70 km/h/ when you were doing 55. I spoike to a bloke who said that in Italy, TPTB made it that way so that the ego-fuelled nutters who ride them could think they were doing 70 when they were only actually doing 55. Figured.
Back in 2013, my 2009 R1200RT has a speedo that reads 108 when I am doing 100 actual. If it was indicating 100, I'd be doing about 92 actual. If it was indicating 105, I'd actually be doing maybe 98.
From these things I suspect that most speedos register optimistically. Certainly the Corollas I've had over the years are maybe 10% optimistic.
So, in fact, if someone gets tagged at 105 actual (well, as good as a calibrated radar or laser is) on the open road, their speedo would have been reading well over that, due to speedo error.
Happy to hear folks honest experience on this, given that speedo error has become such a talking point.
Anyone know what cosine angle effect is? It always means that unless the detection device is being progressed directly down the axis of travel of the target vehicle, the readout will display less than the actual speed. Another factor in the motorists factor.
http://www.copradar.com/preview/chapt2/ch2d1.html
What I guess I am getting to is that if someone gets pinged at 105, or 55 in town, they were actually doing more than that.
Just another side to the debate.
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