I have a Smiths speedo on my feet forward Norton. No problems with calibrating, once you have done the simple calculation of turns of wheel per mile. Odometer not easy to read while riding, but easy enough when stopped, which is fine for most journeys.I agree with Ying - I wired everything under the tank. I didn't find the wiring to be that big of an issue. The speedo calibration...now THAT"S a different kettle of fish! It's hard to accept that with today's technology - "there's an app for that!" - they couldn't have made a very simple calibration process that would be essentially automatic..
BUT, admittedly it works well once the calibration is completed. But I do have a "complaint' about the speedo's operation: the odometer is almost useless in daylight - to dim/too small. In fact, I even considered going back to the OEM speedo because it has a READEable odometer.
Thanks Yves I'll do that.Hi there,
If you need more instructions about the Smiths digital instrument; contact:
Peter Wilkinson at Caerbont Automotive Instruments Ltd, they are the makers from Smiths electronics
peter.wilkinson@caigauge.com
Peter is a very helpfull personn
Regards
Yves
This is my sender unit set up. Hardware came from Matt at cNw. His bikes are all neg earth and he has a magnet in the sender unit, with raised ‘buttons’ in the wheel nut for the magnet to pick up.
My bike is pos earth, so I used the sender unit available from Smiths Pucca. Matt supplied the hardware inc a plain wheel nut without the raised buttons. I then drilled this and fitted a small (4mm diameter I think) magnet in the nut.
I only fitted one magnet, Matt recommends more to get a smooth reading, but it seems to work fine as is.
Regarding your connector question, I used multi pin connectors when I wired up my clocks so they are simple to unplug and remove.
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