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#1
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Connect 722.6 Transmission to Electronic Speedometer
Does any one need any hardware to get there old electronic speedometer working with a 722.6 Transmission swap.
I will be getting quotes on having these wheels made shortly. They install on the front side of the transmission output flange. I will probably need to order a minimum of 5 so the more people interested the cheaper they can be made. These will be made from 4140 steel heat treated to 1040 MPa, Just like a 10.9 bolt. They will be powder coated black or possibly some other corrosion resistant coating. I will have to see what they have to offer. This current set is for the 3 web flange only. Unfortunately it is not possible to make one that works with both 3 and 4 webs. So I would need to put up a separate quote for a 4 web design. These are for use with a hall effect sensor and will require a simple 3 component circuit board to be soldered together for installation. They may also work with a VRS sensor which can be directly wired,but success with that has been limited so far.
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To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
#2
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JR:
Does the 722.6 trans have any provision for speedo drive, and if not, what is the source of speedo information for cars that use that trans? |
#3
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Variable reluctance sensors need a clean sharp edge to make a clean sine wave. With your tone ring design I'd expect the " zero crossing " voltage to rise with increased speed and eventually be higher than the trigger point of the speedo. RE: I'm expecting the sides of the open window area to still have an effect on a VR sensor, a sprocket design would be better.
Early Sprinters supposedly used a sensor in the rear of the trans for road speed. The casting hole is there however you would have to dissemble the trans to drill the case and I don't know what the tooth count is. Making the ring from 4140 is probably overkill, measure the hardness of the output flange and adjust accordingly. I'd expect mild steel to be just fine. Powder coat is just plastic so over time I'd expect it to cold flow and bolts lose some tension. Depending on the sensing range of you hall effect, a layer of power coat might take you out of range. A VR sensor needs tight clearance so I'd expect that to be even worse. Regardless, I tend not to like power coat in a corrosive environment and prefer paint because paint tends to have better adhesion. Paint will slowly peel as the base metal rusts where as powder coat comes off in sheets due to rapidly advancing corrosion. |
#4
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Most cars using the 722.6 get the speed info over the can or possibly a front wheel speed sensor not compatible with the old speedometers.
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To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
#5
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So I tried the Hall Effect sensor and that worked well up to about 80 MPH but using it with the VR wheel was too much the slots need to be shorter. I was able to simulate the Hall effect signal with 50% slot/material and drive the speedometer all the way up to 450Hz (~ 210MPH). Which is the max the speedometer will do. So the second picture shows the installation with nuts and the old long slots. The first picture shows the latest rev that is threaded to avoid the nut problem. Unfortunately that drove the requirement for the 4140 Steel with heat treat. I believe this new wheel will work with either VR or hall effect. But I do like hall effect better. Its just a constant 12 square wave output. Compared to the VR's spikes running well over 100V at higher speeds. As far as the coating I am still up in the air with that. I have considered having the mounting area masked for the coating process, be it paint or powder. But I really would prefer cad plating.
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#6
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I just use a module that reads CAN messages and sends out a signal. They are not cheap but they work and are programmable. Let me know they are 500.00 pre programmed. I can easily do vehicle speed, RPM, CLt etc. 4 channels total. You are running into the problems I had in my sensor design. But if you want to do what you are doing use magnets instead of steel. I use an omnipolar speed sensor that only reads magnets and will ignore the metal around it. Also you cannot adjust for diff ratio and tire size with a fixed setup like that very easily.
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#7
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As for the 100 V,was that an unloaded or loaded voltage? RE: a current transformer not connected to a meter can reach very high output voltages but when loaded the voltage drops dramatically. Increasing sensor to wheel gap is a way to reduce voltage. Quote:
Rather than going to all the effort of another wheel, why not mount a second sensor on the diffs axle flange and use the wheel you already have then use a speedo fooler to generate the needed pulses? Even with your proposed new wheel, will you have the proper pulse ratio to give an accurate speedo reading? |
#8
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10-4 on the adjustment but I'm working on that as well but once I have this a simple frequency adjuster is all that's required.
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To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
#9
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I didn't want to use my diff wheels because they are too far removed from MB's original design 48, tooth verses 4 teeth. I know those frequency changers can shift a frequency +/- 50% but can they shift it 600%???. And then there is sure I have 48 tooth wheels but I would need to make a mount for the sensor. Both those tasks have about the same level of complexity. And then theirs why didn't MB do it that way. Why would they put both a 36 tooth ABS wheel in the diff and a 4 point wheel in the trans??? Bottom line is rarely is something ever as easy as it seems and the pitfalls to each path will only be uncovered by trying it out.
__________________
To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
#10
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I am sorry if I flaked out. I vaguely remember talking to you about it. I think the problem was getting a car of your vintage in to look at to confirm the values.
I was thinking that my speed sensor kit may work to drive a speedometer as well. Problem though is pulses per rev and correction to the differential ratio and tire size still. It would still be easier just to do it over CAN. What year is your donor again? |
#11
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It all gets back to the last paragraph in my previous post to 97 SL320. You were unsure about programming it correctly, I was unsure if I could get it to work on my own, just as I was unsure weather or not I could take signal off my 48 tooth wheels and convert them. So I did what I thought was the simplest thing, doing what Mercedes did. Turned out to be not so simple but I do believe its done and will be a robust solution. In reality they are all pretty simple solutions once you know which screw to turn.
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To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
#12
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In ref to powder coat / plating / paint:
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If I was making something from scratch because the fooler could not make that great of a change, a counter circuit that outputs a pulse to the speedo fooler every 12 pulses would be a good start. The speedo fooler would be for scaling the signal to your diff / tire combo. Sort of like a 2 stage pressure regulator. Quote:
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ABS needs greater resolution than a speedo because ABS needs to tightly control degrees of wheel rotation where as the speedo needs just enough pulses so the needle does not bounce at low speed. You could add damping but then the speedo would be too slow to react. ( As a side note, I wonder if some performance cars reduce needle damping during hard acceleration to make the car appear " faster " ? It would only take a few lines of code to see > 80 % throttle = less damping. ) That 4 point wheel on the trans becomes a ~ 12 point wheel at the diff when counting wheel revolutions so the gap isn't as large as it sounds. There is also the issue where , in the pre 722.6 era , various systems evolved more or less independently. RE: speedo cable to electronic speedo. ABS needed greater resolution and 4 wheel signaling so the speedo 4 point was never considered. Also, given ABS systems are made by others and relatively new at that point, it would have been impractical for Bosch / Tevis / ATE to integrate other systems for everyone's brand of car. True. Too bad many people think because a car makes it's way down the road it took no effort to do so and if there is a problem at some point in the cars lifespan, why this was not foreseen. |
#13
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It is definitely possible to clock another location onto my current bracket but that bracket is not easy to make. For me to fabricate either a tone wheel or the abs bracket is about the same . For people with the right machines to fabricate these same parts the tone wheel is definitely faster and cheaper. That's because the brackets really require tooling. The tone wheel on a machining center with live tooling is all programming then 10 min in the machine. For me on a 1HP 1960's Bridgeport and 1.5HP 1940's Logan lathe its a 20 hour job. Hey I'm not saying it wont work, I just chose a path that appeared to have the least amount of unanswered questions. And even though my first attempt didn't work that doesn't mean it cant work. Each attempt required finding and flushing out all the pitfalls. I had the same issue when I first installed the ABS sensors. My first brackets weren't stiff enough and vibration caused them to have problems.
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To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
#14
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![]() i cleaned the needles off,replaced the plate and lower pan and proceeded to use the car for a few more weeks until the trans gave up completely. ![]() So.. If you want to be able to get a speedo to read the signal from the trans, the loom coming out the side is where you start. the Mercedes WSM has all of that info (nothing much on line regarding which color wire but suspect it will be typical DIN and white. You only need to come up with a device which will power a digital read out when activated by the ignition key . |
#15
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To see my 129 parts for sale visit: John Roncallo |
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