Post
Thu May 19, 2005 7:13 pm
I have a little spreadsheet that does the job. It would be nice to be able to lodge it on the web site for all to use. In the meantime, if you are mathmatically minded its fairly simple to calculate as shown below.
Multiply Tread Width by By Profile Divided by 1270. Add to this the diameter of the wheel. The result is the total diameter of the wheel/tyre combination.
So if we use my Alpina as an example. Original Tyres were 225/45x16 which have been replaced by 215/40X17 F, 245/35X17 R
(225 X 45/1270) + 16 = 23.97244094 inches (608.9mm)
(215 X 40/1270) + 17 = 23.77165354 inches (603.8mm)
(245 X 35/1270) + 17 = 23.75196850 inches (603.3mm)
So the new tyres are about 5mm in diameter smaller, with the rear being half a miilimeter smaller than the front (Bu**er all in other words)
The percentage error can be derived by as 1 minus (New Combo Diameter/Old Combo Diameter) x 100 to give the percentage difference. If the answer is negative, the speedo is under reading.
In the example above (the rears affecting the speedo), the percentage error is calculated as
(1 - (23.75196850/23.97244094)) * 100 = 100 x (1 - 0.991666) = 0.83%.
If the new wheel tyre conbination is bigger than the old set, then the speedo will under read. In legal terms, the speedo can overread by up to 10% (i.e. read 77 when its really doing 70), but must not under read at all. In reality most overread some, so a slight increase in diameter is probably ok.
In my example the Alpina over reads by 0.83%, or in other words a tad over 1mph at 150mph.
[Edit] PS, Shouldn't this be in the Tech Help Section?

Goes ok!