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Speedometer
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===Electronic=== {{see also|Vehicle speed sensor}} Many modern speedometers are [[electronics|electronic]]. In designs derived from earlier eddy-current models, a rotation sensor mounted in the transmission delivers a series of electronic pulses whose frequency corresponds to the (average) rotational speed of the [[drive shaft|driveshaft]], and therefore the vehicle's speed, assuming the wheels have full traction. The sensor is typically a set of one or more magnets mounted on the output shaft or (in transaxles) differential crown wheel, or a toothed metal disk positioned between a magnet and a [[Hall effect|magnetic field sensor]]. As the part in question turns, the magnets or teeth pass beneath the sensor, each time producing a pulse in the sensor as they affect the strength of the magnetic field it is measuring.<ref name="how"/> Alternatively, particularly in vehicles with multiplex wiring, some manufacturers use the pulses coming from the ABS wheel sensors which communicate to the instrument panel via the [[CAN Bus]]. Most modern electronic speedometers have the additional ability over the eddy current type to show the vehicle's speed when moving in reverse gear. A computer converts the pulses to a speed and displays this speed on an electronically controlled, analogue-style needle or a [[digital display]]. Pulse information is also used for a variety of other purposes by the [[Engine Control Unit|ECU]] or full-vehicle control system, e.g. triggering ABS or traction control, calculating average trip speed, or increment the [[odometer]] in place of it being turned directly by the speedometer cable. Another early form of electronic speedometer relies upon the interaction between a precision watch mechanism and a mechanical pulsator driven by the car's wheel or transmission. The watch mechanism endeavours to push the speedometer pointer toward zero, while the vehicle-driven pulsator tries to push it toward infinity. The position of the speedometer pointer reflects the relative magnitudes of the outputs of the two mechanisms. ====Virtual==== Virtual speedometers typically approximate speed based on distance traveled over time with the help of a satellite radio navigation system, such as [[GPS]]. Virtual speedometers tend to be less accurate than their analog counterparts and are affected by environmental factors such as weather conditions, terrain, and obstructions in the way of the signal. ==== Bicycle speedometers ==== {{main|Cyclocomputer}} Typical [[bicycle]] speedometers measure the time between each wheel revolution and give a readout on a small, handlebar-mounted digital display. The sensor is mounted on the bike at a fixed location, pulsing when the spoke-mounted magnet passes by. In this way, it is analogous to an electronic car speedometer using pulses from an ABS sensor, but with a much cruder time/distance resolution β typically one pulse/display update per revolution, or as seldom as once every 2β3 seconds at low speed with a {{convert|26|in|mm|0|adj=on}} wheel. However, this is rarely a critical problem, and the system provides frequent updates at higher road speeds where the information is of more importance. The low pulse frequency also has little impact on measurement accuracy, as these digital devices can be programmed by wheel size, or additionally by wheel or tire circumference to make distance measurements more accurate and precise than a typical motor vehicle gauge. However, these devices carry some minor disadvantages in requiring power from batteries that must be replaced every so often in the receiver (and sensor, for wireless models), and, in wired models, the signal is carried by a thin cable that is much less robust than that used for brakes, gears, or cabled speedometers. Other, usually older bicycle speedometers are cable driven from one or other wheel, as in the motorcycle speedometers described above. These do not require battery power, but can be relatively bulky and heavy, and may be less accurate. The turning force at the wheel may be provided either from a gearing system at the hub (making use of the presence of e.g. a hub brake, cylinder gear, or dynamo) as per a typical motorcycle, or with a friction wheel device that pushes against the outer edge of the rim (same position as rim brakes, but on the opposite edge of the fork) or the sidewall of the tire itself. The former type is quite reliable and low maintenance but needs a gauge and hub gearing properly matched to the rim and tire size, whereas the latter requires little or no calibration for a moderately accurate readout (with standard tires, the "distance" covered in each wheel rotation by a friction wheel set against the rim should scale fairly linearly with wheel size, almost as if it were rolling along the ground itself) but are unsuitable for off-road use, and must be kept properly tensioned and clean of road dirt to avoid slipping or jamming.
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