A
Anthony
Guest
Is it possible to inflate the FJR's odometer reading? It could come in real handy if you wanted a way to simultaneously brag about your false iron butt rally, devalue your bike, and land yourself in the pokey!
Except the Iron Butt Rally uses MULTIPLE other methods to establish mileage than just your odometer. While I only know of a couple beyond the obvious details included with receipts....I know enough to know that's purported IBR mileages aren't made up.brag about your false iron butt rally,
Is it possible to inflate the FJR's odometer reading? It could come in real handy if you wanted a way to simultaneously brag about your false iron butt rally, devalue your bike, and land yourself in the pokey!
BUT....why?
Again, no different than any gauge cluster replacement on any motor vehicle. I had a Chevy once with an electronic gauge cluster****, and the odometer mileage was stored in the cluster. It had to be replaced when everything went dark one day, so my title had a "not actual mileage, indicated plus XX,XXX" or something like that.Gauge cluster replacements will also cause a "reset". At least on GenI bikes that is.
Which makes filling out title paperwork or bringing it in for service mean that there is near always some math to do. Don't understand why MammaYamma decided to not only keep the mileage within the cluster, but not allow some way to correct it if necessary.
Hindsight really is 20/20 :glare:
Hmm... guess that makes sense - when they replaced the ECU in my Miata the readout did not change.Again, no different than any gauge cluster replacement on any motor vehicle. I had a Chevy once with an electronic gauge cluster****, and the odometer mileage was stored in the cluster. It had to be replaced when everything went dark one day, so my title had a "not actual mileage, indicated plus XX,XXX" or something like that.Gauge cluster replacements will also cause a "reset". At least on GenI bikes that is.
Which makes filling out title paperwork or bringing it in for service mean that there is near always some math to do. Don't understand why MammaYamma decided to not only keep the mileage within the cluster, but not allow some way to correct it if necessary.
Hindsight really is 20/20 :glare:
It's not a Yamaha design flaw, it's a government requirment for securing the odometer.
Yes, the speedo reads optimistic (high), but the odometer reads pretty much dead nuts with the stock sized tire. Although they both get their signal from the same sender, the speedo is intentionally optimistic to keep people out of trouble. Putting a tire large enough to compensate the speedo will cause the odometer to read low by the same (small) amount.Seems like this post is referring mostly to purposely inflating ones odometer.
I did not see anything mentioned about the inaccuracy built right into the bike from the factory. With the diameter of the stock rear tire (180/55-17), my speedometer was showing a 4-5mph discrepancy at 75 mph. This in turn would indicate more miles being racked up than is really being ridden. That computes anywhere from 6-8%. That could mean for every 1000 miles ridden could potentially add an additional 60-80 miles. It could be enough to alter resale value.
I've heard this before, but is anyone really sure, or is this just kind of an assumption? I know that when I take a trip on the bike and zero the odometer and my GPS, my bike always shows more miles than the GPS. The funny thing is it's about 5% more than the GPS and my speed is usually about 5% higher than actual. I'm betting our odos are reporting slightly higher mileage than we are actually riding.Yes, the speedo reads optimistic (high), but the odometer reads pretty much dead nuts with the stock sized tire. Although they both get their signal from the same sender, the speedo is intentionally optimistic to keep people out of trouble. Putting a tire large enough to compensate the speedo will cause the odometer to read low by the same (small) amount.Seems like this post is referring mostly to purposely inflating ones odometer.
I did not see anything mentioned about the inaccuracy built right into the bike from the factory. With the diameter of the stock rear tire (180/55-17), my speedometer was showing a 4-5mph discrepancy at 75 mph. This in turn would indicate more miles being racked up than is really being ridden. That computes anywhere from 6-8%. That could mean for every 1000 miles ridden could potentially add an additional 60-80 miles. It could be enough to alter resale value.
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