Hi all, I have an 08 year Prius and It has about 7,500 miles on the clock. When I first had it the speedo has always been reading about 10% too fast. Two different GPS units and a scan gauge II show my speed at 60mph on cruise control yet the dash display shows 66mph... This is with standard tyres (Turanza) for a UK model, 16" wheels etc I got fed up with it and rang the local dealer to fix it under warranty. The service tech is going to e-mail a tech bulletin from Toyota with regards to the accuracy... sounds like a "fob off" to me! Anyone got a copy of this info ? Also has anyone got Toyota to look at/fix an inaccurate speedo ? According to Google there are many out there who say they have accurate (within 3mph will do!) speedo readings with their Prii... What are your opinions on this...? My previous Toyota models (below) were accurate to 2 or 3 mph. Regards, Doz
The only way I know to adjust a Prius speedometer is to change the tires. The standard Prius in the US comes with Goodyear Integrity 185/65SR15 tires that are rated 855 revolutions per mile. This makes the speedometer read only slightly high. If you put on a tire that has a lower revs/mile, the speedometer will read lower by the same percentage change. You can check the revs/mile of your tires at: Bridgestone Tires Available at Tire Rack And see where you stand with your Bridgestone tires. JeffD
If you know the TSB number and pay a short subscription to Toyota Service Information you could download it yourself. Personally, I'm not too bothered, it means that when I don't try to compensate for the induced errors, I know I'm driving within the speed limits and I am probably getting a better MPG as a result of driving slower. I was driving 74 on the motorway today as indicated on the speedo, so I was still below the speed limit:mod: Not so good for the MPG, but for longer trips I tend to drive at 60 so I guess that I must be zooming along at 55.
Based upon my Magellan GPS, the speedometer on my 2004 (with the correct size 15" tires) reads high around 2 mph at 70 mph. I am not aware of any TSB issued by TMS USA on this point; perhaps a TSB was issued by Toyota Europe? I've heard that UK Prius speedometers read high as the OP mentioned, and that this is by intent, not error. I am not aware of any way to "fix" the speedometer error that you noted, other than by installing larger tires so that the car will travel farther for a given number of tire revolutions.
Other posters have stated that Toyota uses speedos that conform to UN standards in Europe. The UN standard allows the instrument to read up to 10% higher and be in spec so I believe your dealer will say, "It's supposed to do that."
Ten percent high sounds about right for the European market. You have different laws over there regarding speedometer accuracy, which generally requires them to be set optimistic. I don't think there is much you can do about it other than switching tires. Tom
Normally, this is a safety margin. Think about what would happen if your speedo read 6MPH slower! My Porsche did it. My motorcycle does it.
Also be aware that the rated revs/mile of a tire may be fairly inaccurate. The 855 r/m of my original integrities made the car match the GPS almost *precisely*, when I ran the tires at a decent pressure. Then I got the Hydroedges which were actually rated at 854 r/m, making me think they'd be very close and only make the car appear to be going just a teeny bit slower. . Guess what, the inflated HEs had a measurably *smaller* circumference than the Integrities [yes, I checked this] and it turned out to give me a 1.2% *faster* speed and measured distance error. That was pretty annoying, but I just dropped a modifiable TIREFACTOR into the scripts I use to keep track of my lmpg and periodically compare car distance vs. GPS distance on open, straight roads to make sure the error is still being accounted for. As the tires wear their r/m will continue to slowly rise, so I can track that through their lifetime. . Life's little surprises. . _H*
Pat, Thanks for that piece of electronic wizardry. Do you have one installed? Of late, I've noticed that to keep up with a series of traffic lights I have to exceed the posted speed limit by about 10% as indicated on the speedometer. It seems odd that the traffic engineers would set things up that way, having to break to law to move quickly, efficiently along. So, maybe my speedo is set 10% high. That would also explain why the Prius generates a lot of negative comments and even road rage incidents for going too slow, when the operator honestly thinks (s)he is doing the legal maximum; doing an actual 45 MPH when the speedo indicates 50. As to the little gizmo, where would it be best installed? In a place so that it corrects the speedo reading? Or somewhere else so that it corrected the HSD inputs?
I don't need one, my speedo reads 1km/h under the speed my GPS reads at all speeds. Truck drivers use these to get their speed limited trucks to go faster by fudging the speed signal. We know they do it and we know how to catch them out.
Hi mate, you live in the UK and have a EU Spec car. All cars, by EU law, must have a speedo that reads at least 5% more than real. The car knows the speed it's doing (Scanguage tells you that), the GPS calculates it in real time, but the speedo sull show the difference. Somewhere in here (Prius at top speed) yuo will find my pictire clocking the Prius at 183 (Kph) while the GPS says 175. Put your mind at rest: until the EU changes whis crappy homologation law, ALL speedo's will have this defect.
I believe the permitted range is actually -4%/+10%. It's a deliberate electronic fudge; if you go into the MFD diagnostics - press Display, tap upper-left, then lower-left of the inner frame and repeat another two times - then tap Vehicle Signal Check, it shows the real speed (in km/h). To get out, press and hold the Display button for about ten seconds. Note that you lose your accumulated data for this trip when you go into MFD diagnostics. As always you should not attempt to go into diagnostics mode while driving.
No. The UNECE Regulation No.39 does not allow minus display value. http://www.unece.org/trans/main/wp29/wp29regs/r039r1e.pdf 0 <= (V1-V2) <= 0.1*V2+6km/h Ken@Japan
The obvious downside to a speedo reading high is it will rack up mileage faster and burn through the warranty faster.
The speedometer and odometer are separate, the UK/EU fudge for reading high is thankfully only applied to the speedometer.
Yes I confirm. I tested the odometer and it loses 21 km over 1000 done. (Car says 1000, GPS says 1021)