1980 mci 5c speed sensor?
 

1980 mci 5c speed sensor?

Started by mccarlk, August 07, 2009, 08:06:22 PM

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mccarlk

looked under the bus all over the auto trans and can not find a speed sensor, where does the speedo get the signal from?
treat every day like is your last, just make sure you dont spend all your money,in case its not!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Fredward

on my 5A it is electronic. There is a sensor on the driver's side front brake drum. Wire runs right up to the speedometer. Obviously not OE but I imagine after a couple million miles, the old drive cable wore out. (the current odometer reads 1,120,000 miles!)
Fred
Fred Thomson

Airbag

The MC5A stock speedometer

The electric speedometer consists of an electric sending unit driven by means of a short flexible shaft connected to the conventional drive. A four wire cable is connected to the sending unit and the indicator by A/N (army navy) type connectors. Battery current is supplied through a single wire to the brush holder on the sending unit. A grounding wire is connected to a ground terminal on the sending unit.

This is the poop from the 5A manual. should be close I hope.

My bad I see you have an auto ooooops.








jjrbus

On my 79 5C the original speedo ran off a sensor which obtained signals from magnets attached to the driver side brake drum. The wire ran to a "pillbox" and then on to the speedometer.

When I started haveing problems with it, I replaced both the pickup and speedometer head at a cost of about $200, it really was the easy way out.   I replaced it with a Dixon speedometer with odometer.

According to the service manual the bus can be equipped with two types of speedo. The first tool you should obtain with these beasts is a service manual!!    JIm
Remember, even at a Mensa convention someone is the dumbest person in the room!

http://photobucket.com/buspictures

http://photobucket.com/buspictures

Lin

GPS speedometers are an option also.  This one has heads up display.

http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.13935
You don't have to believe everything you think.

Ncbob

Mac, I've changed speedometer drive generators twice and still have a 10% error.

I just stick the old Garmin GPS on the left side of the windshield and when I find the groove that keeps me
'tween the big truckers and the people powered roller skates I just check the tach and hold 'er there for the whole trip. I don't run with the crowd...I find an interval that's safe and comfortable for me with plenty of
braking room. Unless I'm running with Jack Conrad....that's where the big dogs have to sit on the porch!

NCbob