Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 36

Thread: Using a GPS for WOF purposes - Speedometer?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    13th May 2006 - 12:21
    Bike
    2002 KTM 640 Adventure
    Location
    S37.53984 E175.71482
    Posts
    3,106

    Using a GPS for WOF purposes - Speedometer?

    I have an issue with my speedometer. It works but the display is very dim and sometimes disappears all together. It could be a short and I have pulled everything apart to try and find the issue but to no avail.
    I was wondering if my GPS, hard wired and attached to the bike can be used to pass my WOF?

    The document obtained from LTSA is a little vague but mentions nothing and only really seems to be concerned with forward speed that has to measured and safety with being obscurred or dangerous etc...

    Can anyone enlighten me? Has anybody out there tried this with a testing station or got a WOF with a GPS attached.

    I still want to ride the bike until I get it remedied, in the meantime I thought I could use the GPS to pass the WOF.

    I have attached the relevent document below for anyone interested in looking. Thanks everyone
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails motorcycles-07-v3.pdf  

  2. #2
    Join Date
    5th February 2008 - 13:07
    Bike
    2006 Hyosung GT650R
    Location
    BOP
    Posts
    7,141
    Well there are two parts to that ;

    1.) You can use anything for a speedo. A bicycle speedo is legal IIRC.

    2.) You really have no intention of hard-wiring the GPS in place and leaving there as a speedo do you? If you get stopped by the fuzz you will have some explaining to do, and your story had better be well rehearsed.

    Steve
    "I am a licenced motorcycle instructor, I agree with dangerousbastard, no point in repeating what he said."
    "read what Steve says. He's right."
    "What Steve said pretty much summed it up."
    "I did axactly as you said and it worked...!!"
    "Wow, Great advise there DB."
    WTB: Hyosung bikes or going or not.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    11th June 2006 - 15:52
    Bike
    Suzuki GSX1250FA, TGB 50cc moped
    Location
    Horowhenua
    Posts
    1,879
    Quote Originally Posted by DangerousBastard View Post
    Well there are two parts to that ;

    1.) You can use anything for a speedo. A bicycle speedo is legal IIRC.

    2.) You really have no intention of hard-wiring the GPS in place and leaving there as a speedo do you? If you get stopped by the fuzz you will have some explaining to do, and your story had better be well rehearsed.

    Steve
    DB is dead right. I have had to use a bicycle speedo ($29.95) on my CZ, as the original speedo is toast, and un-obtainium.

    Bike speedos are calibrated by wheel cicumference, so you can get then perfectly accurate on virtually any wheel.

    My speedo claims a top speed of 299 km/hr.. so far the CZ has managed 92, so I must try harder.

    For a WOF the speedo must be lit at night.
    David must play fair with the other kids, even the idiots.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    13th May 2006 - 12:21
    Bike
    2002 KTM 640 Adventure
    Location
    S37.53984 E175.71482
    Posts
    3,106

    I see where you are coming from...

    Quote Originally Posted by DangerousBastard View Post
    Well there are two parts to that ;

    1.) You can use anything for a speedo. A bicycle speedo is legal IIRC.

    2.) You really have no intention of hard-wiring the GPS in place and leaving there as a speedo do you? If you get stopped by the fuzz you will have some explaining to do, and your story had better be well rehearsed.

    Steve
    Thanks.
    If I get pulled over it wouldn't be for a speedo isssue. The cop would never know it if worked or not, because I am stopped.
    It is hard wired and it would be removed etc when left unattended.
    I have actully just spoken to the Testingstation and it seems that it has to be a speedo that can register up to 50kph, good working order.
    If it is a GPS that can measure speed as it does, the guy seemed to think that it isn't an issue.
    If he can see the speed when riding it, then I might be okay. I will in fact have two working speedometers, one of which is a bit hard to see the LED displays.....
    Thanks Steve, I will give it a go I think..

  5. #5
    Join Date
    13th May 2006 - 12:21
    Bike
    2002 KTM 640 Adventure
    Location
    S37.53984 E175.71482
    Posts
    3,106

    everything you say is correct...

    Quote Originally Posted by davereid View Post
    DB is dead right. I have had to use a bicycle speedo ($29.95) on my CZ, as the original speedo is toast, and un-obtainium.

    Bike speedos are calibrated by wheel cicumference, so you can get then perfectly accurate on virtually any wheel.

    My speedo claims a top speed of 299 km/hr.. so far the CZ has managed 92, so I must try harder.

    For a WOF the speedo must be lit at night.
    The GPS does all of that and it is more accurate than the magnet on the circumference of the wheel...It measures the speed and average, maximum and displays current just like the cheap or expensice speedos for bicycles...
    It displays at night, back light on permanently, I really cannot see it being an issue here, but could be wrong?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    23rd February 2009 - 05:50
    Bike
    1993 Suzuki GSXF
    Location
    Madrid, Spain
    Posts
    156
    Beware that it won't work on tunnels, and may be faulty under heavy forest cover. It will also need some time to fix on satellite after power on.

    We've discussed the use of GPS as speedos in a production bike, and they rejected it because of that.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    1st March 2007 - 07:37
    Bike
    Vespa GT200, LML Vespa 130, Honda NXR125
    Location
    Hillsborough in the 09
    Posts
    426
    Quote Originally Posted by NZKTM View Post
    I was wondering if my GPS, hard wired and attached to the bike can be used to pass my WOF?
    I'm sure it can, why not.

    Quote Originally Posted by NZKTM View Post
    Can anyone enlighten me? Has anybody out there tried this with a testing station or got a WOF with a GPS attached.
    One of my scoots has a bike speedo (magnet on the rim set up) and it flys through everytime. Even at the VTNZ nazi warehouse...
    Quote Originally Posted by Timmay View Post
    goes like a whore on P

  8. #8
    Join Date
    10th April 2005 - 09:35
    Bike
    .
    Location
    .
    Posts
    815
    Quote Originally Posted by mujambee View Post
    Beware that it won't work on tunnels, and may be faulty under heavy forest cover. It will also need some time to fix on satellite after power on.

    We've discussed the use of GPS as speedos in a production bike, and they rejected it because of that.
    and some fookn hitler nazi will see it ain't standard and probably make you get it certified - just get the original one fixed
    It is what it is

  9. #9
    Join Date
    30th March 2004 - 11:00
    Bike
    2001 RC46
    Location
    Norfshaw
    Posts
    10,455
    Blog Entries
    17
    My speedo's currently not working (either the sender is 'ted, or the electronic speedo corrector, or there's a loose/broken wire).
    I had all the fairings off on Sunday to check it out, and fit new heated grips, but the friggin' thing passed all the tests according to the workshop manual! Then, as soon as I got it out on the raod again, it gave one or two desolutory flicks of the needle, and stopped working altogether.
    Gaah! Now I have to take the fairings off again.

    It's OK on the open road, as I know that 100km/h is ~5k rpm in 6th gear. However, around town, given I could be any gear, it's a mater of guesstimating, based on experience, other traffic, etc.
    I've toyed with using the TomTom (I've used it on the bike before) but it's not weatherproof.
    ... and that's what I think.

    Or summat.


    Or maybe not...

    Dunno really....


  10. #10
    Join Date
    13th May 2006 - 12:21
    Bike
    2002 KTM 640 Adventure
    Location
    S37.53984 E175.71482
    Posts
    3,106

    Power...

    Quote Originally Posted by mujambee View Post
    Beware that it won't work on tunnels, and may be faulty under heavy forest cover. It will also need some time to fix on satellite after power on.

    We've discussed the use of GPS as speedos in a production bike, and they rejected it because of that.
    Is on all the time, it is always fixed to the satellites as a result. The draw of power is as much as your little clock fixed inside the speedo. I would only take it off if resting overnight etc and away from the bike out of view...
    I only really want it for the WOF, once I get it I will then look into the original issue. Just cannot afford the labour and testing of the harness or similar.
    Being a hand held it really works well under cover of trees, dense bush. Tunnels, yes, that could be an issue but you are only in them for a seond or two unless travelling Mont Blanc or similar...lol

  11. #11
    Join Date
    30th March 2004 - 11:00
    Bike
    2001 RC46
    Location
    Norfshaw
    Posts
    10,455
    Blog Entries
    17
    Crap! Damn-n-Blarst, and all that.
    I am hoping my speedo corrector's fukt, rather than the speedo sender unit. Just rang for a price, and this little gizmo is over $377!!
    Of course, it's also, not in stock, so is an indent item, so it'll be "money up front, 3 weeks ex-Japan."
    Now here's the ridiculous bit: $377 is ~US$210 (at current conversion rates).
    I checked yesterday, and I can get one from several different dealers in The Yooonarted Stites of Mrka for US$72.
    Presumably, their Genuine Honda Parts are made in the Philipines, or Kazahkstan or summat, to be only one-third the price.
    ... and that's what I think.

    Or summat.


    Or maybe not...

    Dunno really....


  12. #12
    Join Date
    26th July 2004 - 15:34
    Bike
    None right now. <sniff>
    Location
    North Shore, Auckland
    Posts
    267
    GPS speed should be accurate as it *usually* works off Doppler from the satellite signals, so no funnies with going round curves, up/down hills, etc.

    However, bear in mind that the update is only once a second, and that in town, under trees and in tunnels reception may be a bit iffy.

    Dim LCD usually attributable to a circuit-level problem in/near the display itself. New display will be $$$$, poking around behind it to see where the dodgy connection is will be major inconvenience. Your choice...
    BM-GS
    Auckland

  13. #13
    Join Date
    2nd August 2008 - 08:57
    Bike
    '23 CRF 1100
    Location
    Hamilton
    Posts
    2,488
    Quote Originally Posted by BM-GS View Post
    works off Doppler from the satellite signals
    Ummm . . . WHAT????

    Unless I have somehow completely misunderstood how GPS works then I am pretty sure it does not use Doppler in any way.
    ----------------------------------------------------
    Quote Originally Posted by PrincessBandit View Post
    I realised that having 105kg of man sliding into my rear was a tad uncomfortable
    "If the cops didn't see it, I didn't do it!"
    - George Carlin (RIP)

  14. #14
    Join Date
    3rd December 2002 - 13:00
    Bike
    1991 Kawasaki ZXR400L1
    Location
    West Auckland
    Posts
    841
    As has already mentioned a GPS is unreliable. It is only as accurate as its signal strength and this is affected by rain, cloud cover, tunnels, canyons, high rise buildings and also the inside of a building such as the testing station.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    3rd December 2002 - 13:00
    Bike
    1991 Kawasaki ZXR400L1
    Location
    West Auckland
    Posts
    841
    Quote Originally Posted by MarkH View Post
    Ummm . . . WHAT????

    Unless I have somehow completely misunderstood how GPS works then I am pretty sure it does not use Doppler in any way.
    Some do but only for correction. Basic position is calculated by the usual distance triangulation thing but is adjusted for the movement of the satellites and rotation of the earth.

    To get the best accuracy these days they take everything possible into account including time dilation due to the satellites high speed and time slowing down (einsteins theory of relativity).

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •