Hope everyone had a good weekend. I am hoping to get some feedback on what you were 60 mile an hour RPM is to see if my tack is as optimistic as I think it may well be.
Ideally hearing from an S4 owner running standard height modern tires would be great
Yes I need that as despite my Elan Tach being reasonable accurate for 1960’s electronics my lawn mower keeps stalling in high torque long grass situations and I need to monitor it better
My slightly flippant reply was actually meant in good faith. Checking your tach against a speedo of unknown accuracy with tyres of unknown rolling diameter is never going to be a precise business.
To improve things, you could put a chalk mark on the tyre and measure how far (say) 10 revolutions gets you letting the car roll forwards. You could also use a GPS speed app on your phone for speed.
Depends how accurate you want to be. In a past life I did measure the rolling diameter of a number of tyres of supposedly the same size from different manufacturers and there was significant differences (up to 10%).
For the price of one of those digital tachs (I bought one myself) you can at least have some faith in your measurements.
If that is what you have then, with the tire size specified, you should be at 3340 rpm at 60 mph, assuming both your tach and speedo are accurate.
This is ignoring higher order effects such as tire inflation, tire wear, tire heat, load, … Also, the presumed 80 profile might not be that accurate either.
If one uses the more precise diff ratio of 3.7777777… (34/9) instead of 3.770, for example, the rpms at 60 would be 3345 instead of 3340.
Thank you, that’s very helpful. I expect the supplemental digital tack that I ordered today to confirm this tomorrow. It does raise the question of why my current unit is reading anywhere between 1000 to 1500 RPM high.
Yup, try powering straight from start solenoid instead of the coil to test. If that sorts it a simple fused relay, using coil to switch it and solenoid as power source should sort it out.
60 mph 3300 rpm =/- no markers between 3 and 4 so estimating.
At 3000 rpm, speed is 53 mph
Looking at the two gauges while driving in 4th gear, speedometer and tach, the needles should be in line with each other on their respective gauge - same position on each gauge.
That’s the simple way to tell if your tach is accurate.