et al ,
Using a tire diam of 25.5", these are rounded out MPH @ 1 K RPM
3,27 - 23 mph
3,46 -22 mph
3,92 - 19 mph.
So @ 3K, one should see a gain of 9 mph going form a 3,92 to a 3,46...and a 12 mph gain with the 3,27.
I like to break it down to 1K so you can drive with the tach and know your mph w/o speedo change/cal.
Same goes for Euro speedo cars
If one wants to get fussy, you can determine the tire diam exactly by loading car [ as suggested in the manual] , checking for your normally used tire PSI in the rear and measure the Rolling Circumference..then divide by pi*
This is the exact real driving tire diam , as it allows for tire wear.,chassis load, and tire PSI. This is easily done by marking the tire and the pavement with chalk [ making sure this mark is coming thru the axle C/L ] , and rolling the car foward one complete rev, remark the pavement and measure the distance between the 2 marks..That is real loaded circumference..do the pi math and then use that diam in your calculations.
A little over the top, but, why not ..............
http://www.bgsoflex.com/rpmmph.htmlIf one does not see gains close to these with a diff. change, even using GPS, then the reason may be a wacky tach, slipping clutch/TC, or the infamous loose flange nut , The speedo pinion is a clamp/friction drive design , being sandwiched on the tailshaft, If the nut is loose , the pinion slips causing the speedo to be incorrect
. A simple test for this condition is to watch the speedo at lower gears..if it bounces when excell/decell,then the suspect is loose flange nut,,,very common on 113's.
PS
I use 25.5 in the example b/c stock factory tires were SR profile, which equates to 25.65" diam,
whereas a replacement with 195/75 would be 25.52 [ close as you can get in replacement sizing]
A Dalton
BenzTechs