Odometer (in)accuracy
Discussion
So we all know the speed over reads by around 5%, but I now realise the odometer does too. Example, I regularly do a run which is 100 miles according to my other cars, yet the same drive in my McLaren is 106 miles. I'm coming up to 20,000 miles on the clock, but it is really only 19,000! Annoying.
targarama said:
So we all know the speed over reads by around 5%, but I now realise the odometer does too. Example, I regularly do a run which is 100 miles according to my other cars, yet the same drive in my McLaren is 106 miles. I'm coming up to 20,000 miles on the clock, but it is really only 19,000! Annoying.
From my understanding on most carsThe true mileage is recorded and is what is displayed on the ODO
The natural speedo over reading is not what contributes to the odometer total - the car knows exactly how many miles it's done (well, much more precisely than the speedo would imply)
CarCrazyDad said:
targarama said:
So we all know the speed over reads by around 5%, but I now realise the odometer does too. Example, I regularly do a run which is 100 miles according to my other cars, yet the same drive in my McLaren is 106 miles. I'm coming up to 20,000 miles on the clock, but it is really only 19,000! Annoying.
From my understanding on most carsThe true mileage is recorded and is what is displayed on the ODO
The natural speedo over reading is not what contributes to the odometer total - the car knows exactly how many miles it's done (well, much more precisely than the speedo would imply)
targarama said:
Seems odd that the trip would add a different amount to the odo though. Why would the trip not be accurate? Of course I agree the speedo over reads, and accept that.
It doesn't thoughLet's say you're doing an indicated 74mph
This may be (for arguments sake) a true 70mph.
If you drive for an hour then you will have 70mi displayed both on your Odometer and your trip computer (not specific to Mclaren but any modern car).
samjlevy said:
This was discussed on the McLaren Life forum and was concluded that the speedo over reading does not contribute to any increased mileage.
The odometer is accurate so don't worry about it.
I thought it was the opposite? https://www.mclarenlife.com/threads/speedometer-er...The odometer is accurate so don't worry about it.
I also get a higher reading on the odometer on my new 570S vs. my previous car for the same trips.
CarCrazyDad said:
It doesn't though
Let's say you're doing an indicated 74mph
This may be (for arguments sake) a true 70mph.
If you drive for an hour then you will have 70mi displayed both on your Odometer and your trip computer (not specific to Mclaren but any modern car).
But the trip is showing 74 miles. Not 70. That is my point. This image below is for a 100 mile journey according to Google and my Lexus:Let's say you're doing an indicated 74mph
This may be (for arguments sake) a true 70mph.
If you drive for an hour then you will have 70mi displayed both on your Odometer and your trip computer (not specific to Mclaren but any modern car).
I just read a post on the McLaren Life forum thread referenced above where someone changed tyres to wider tyre with a slightly higher overall circumference reducing the speedo/odo difference from 4% to 2% (their measurements). They suggest the 570 is not calibrated specifically for this model, but instead keeps the 650 calibration settings.
Anyway, I'm not too fussed as long as every McLaren 570 is over registering on it's odometer
Anyway, I'm not too fussed as long as every McLaren 570 is over registering on it's odometer
Implus1 said:
I thought it was the opposite? https://www.mclarenlife.com/threads/speedometer-er...
I also get a higher reading on the odometer on my new 570S vs. my previous car for the same trips.
Interesting, for some reason I thought they had proven it was not an issue.I also get a higher reading on the odometer on my new 570S vs. my previous car for the same trips.
I'm surprised it is so far off on some of the tests on there.
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