Digital Spedometer On 2010 Civic ?

Discussion in 'Civic' started by Bob, Jan 28, 2010.

  1. Bob

    Brian Smith Guest

    I tested mine with the help from friends in both the HRM Police and the
    RCMP.
     
    Brian Smith, Jan 30, 2010
    #21
  2. Bob

    pws Guest

    My old GPS would display a MPH reading and it matched my speedometer in
    two different vehicles, but my current GPS on my phone does not have
    this capability.
     
    pws, Jan 30, 2010
    #22
  3. Bob

    Joe Guest

    2 Different GPS' as well as mile markers and time recording. All
    showed the exact same speed as each other during different tests, so I
    am confident in the speedo.
     
    Joe, Jan 31, 2010
    #23
  4. Bob

    Joe Guest

    And what I'm saying, again, is that you're arguing against something
    that nobody said, just to try to sound like the smartest guy in the
    room, apparently.
    Bottom line, LCD displays are bright, easy to read, and easier to
    place in tight spots. They make sense, once you get past the
    nostalgia of it all.
     
    Joe, Jan 31, 2010
    #24
  5. Bob

    Dave D Guest

    Thank you Jim. That was my point exactly.
    Daved
     
    Dave D, Jan 31, 2010
    #25
  6. Bob

    Dave D Guest

    What you believe is totally WRONG. As far as the bus is concerned, I drive,
    rather drove that vehicle for many thousands of miles, ergo I believe that
    my attention level is quite sufficient to operate nearly any vehicle on the
    road today, avoiding idiots that have their heads stuck in a cell phone or
    texting to their friends instead of devoting the requisite attention to
    vehicle operation. If you don't agree, then you had best be the one riding a
    bus!!!!
    DaveD
     
    Dave D, Jan 31, 2010
    #26
  7. Bob

    Brian Smith Guest

    That is only your opinion and as such (while you are able to have your
    opinion), it isn't based on any factual knowledge. A person with their
    head held upright and their eyes moving horizontally is able to take in
    more than a person who is constantly glancing away from the outside of
    the vehicle to check on speed, rpm and other information that can be
    displayed on the windshield. It's been proven over the years.
     
    Brian Smith, Jan 31, 2010
    #27
  8. Bob

    Jim Yanik Guest

    some folks -think- they can "multitask" behind the wheel and do it
    safely,but it's only their imagination.They don't see how they affect the
    traffic flow and others around them. It's narcisstic,or MFFY.

    --
    Jim Yanik
    jyanik
    at
    localnet
    dot com
     
    Jim Yanik, Jan 31, 2010
    #28
  9. Bob

    Stewart Guest

    I've seen a few digital speedometers...to busy for my tastes,
    especially at night. In my business, the last thing you want to see
    are numbers in a digital display constantly changing.
     
    Stewart, Jan 31, 2010
    #29
  10. Bob

    Dave D Guest

    No, that has not been proven!!!! What has been proven is - that after a
    period of TRAINING a person will do as you say. Unfortunately, a goodly
    fraction of the vehicles on the road today are being operated by persons who
    have NEVER been trained in such a manner...That was my original point.

    DaveD
     
    Dave D, Feb 1, 2010
    #30
  11. Bob

    Brian Smith Guest

    You aren't very good at making a believable point. What training do you
    think it takes for a person to look straight ahead and see what is going
    on around their vehicle and the gauges in a HUD?
     
    Brian Smith, Feb 1, 2010
    #31
  12. Bob

    jim beam Guest


    it's dangerous to not be looking straight ahead??? so evidently you're
    the idiot that causes other people to have crashes because you never
    check your mirrors. what a nimrod.
     
    jim beam, Feb 1, 2010
    #32
  13. Bob

    Guy Guest


    Agreed. For some reason (perhaps because I'm not used to it??)
    digital gages stand out too much for me and too distracting when they
    constantly flash new numbers. I found myself watching the mpg
    digital gage the other day as I'm still getting used to a new CR-V. I
    guess I'm getting old :( Not good because I need to watch the road
    more like I do in my much older Accord.
     
    Guy, Feb 2, 2010
    #33
  14. Bob

    Guy Guest


    Thank you for satisfying my curiousity.
     
    Guy, Feb 2, 2010
    #34
  15. Bob

    jim beam Guest

    no dude, you said, digital "is very accurate". that is not correct -
    unless calibrated to a higher degree, it's no more accurate than any
    other gauge.

    "tight spots" on that honking great gap between the steering wheel and
    windshield? no, lcd's are cheap. and that's it.
     
    jim beam, Feb 2, 2010
    #35
  16. Bob

    Dave D Guest

    You aren't very good at comprehending an obvious point. How long and how
    much training do you think it takes to qualify a fighter pilot? If you think
    you are so qualified, I'm glad you aren't driving up here in Alaska with me.

    DaveD
     
    Dave D, Feb 2, 2010
    #36
  17. Bob

    Brian Smith Guest

    How much training do you think it takes to look through a windshield?
    I'm so glad that you're way up there in the boonies out of the way of
    traffic.
     
    Brian Smith, Feb 2, 2010
    #37
  18. Bob

    Joe Guest

    No, "dude", I said MY digital is very accurate. That is correct. I
    claimed no comparison to any other gauge. That is you reading into
    the statement and trying to make an argument out of it.
    Tight spots, as in put it anywhere they want. Just because Honda gave
    it a large spot doesn't mean that it wouldn't work just as well in a
    much smaller, tighter one.
     
    Joe, Feb 2, 2010
    #38
  19. Bob

    Dillon Pyron Guest

    Do you find that it takes longer to process the speed reading? The
    major advantage of analog is you only need to see the needle and know
    where it is in relationship to where it "should" be or where you
    "expected" it to be.

    Way back in the olden days, guys used to line their tach up so the
    theoretical shift point (2 rpm below redline) was vertical. Some road
    racers would put a piece of tape at the rough downshift point. Now
    it's all a bunch of little dots.
    --

    - dillon I am not invalid

    I love my country, It's my government I fear.

    Hey, turnabout's fair play.
     
    Dillon Pyron, Feb 3, 2010
    #39
  20. Bob

    Joe Guest

    Not at all. It's smooth, but reads where I'd expect it to. I've
    never had the feeling that it was behind at all.
    When accelerating hard like that, I don't like to rely on a gauge at
    all. I hardly ever look at them during hard accel or decel. It takes
    a few months with a new car, but you eventually get to the point where
    you feel and hear the shiftpoints, IMO.

    The light on the Si is pretty well-behaved and useful, too. It comes
    on at 8000 RPM, with an 8500 RPM Redline. I can remember a lot of
    cars in the 80's and 90's that had the light come on more as an
    economy thing, popping on when you were nowhere near the redline.
    Those were useless.
     
    Joe, Feb 3, 2010
    #40
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