Kimberkatana Posted December 11, 2022 Share Posted December 11, 2022 Hi fella's just pondering some future jobs on the 1200 teapot project , if I fit a MK2 600 bandit sprocket cover ( to retain cable clutch ) can the Speedo sensor be used to run an aftermarket Speedo , Koso etc , is the wiring straight forward or a faff cheers for any insight Quote Link to comment
coombehouse Posted December 12, 2022 Share Posted December 12, 2022 (edited) Yes you can use the 1200 sensor on aftermarket clocks. It's covered quite well in the instructions & the wiring is simple, at least on the Daytona set I have. The 600 cover sits approx 3mm closer to the cases though so the sensor fouls hard on the nut. You will need to fettle the inside of the cover, maybe reduce the height of the prongs on the nut & space the sensor away from the cover an appropriate amount or space the whole cover away from the crankcase Edited December 12, 2022 by coombehouse Spolling 2 Quote Link to comment
Kimberkatana Posted December 12, 2022 Author Share Posted December 12, 2022 Cheers fella , that's why I love you lot ! A wealth of knowledge at the tip of my sausage fingers Quote Link to comment
Dezza Posted December 12, 2022 Share Posted December 12, 2022 It won't work with Koso clocks but will work with Daytona clocks, the bloke at digital speedos uk told me this. The problem is attaching the sender thingy to the gearbox output shaft. If it's not pre-drilled (slabby, mk2 blandits are) then it seems a bit hit or miss trying to do this. All i achieved was a pile of blunted and reshaped drill bits so gave up and fitted a Daytona sender but others have had better results. Oh, and the later teapot covers also fit and accept the same sender gizmo. Quote Link to comment
Kimberkatana Posted December 12, 2022 Author Share Posted December 12, 2022 I'm putting a MK2 1200 bandit engine in a MK1 teapot but am thinking I want modern dash/clocks so already got drilled output shaft , was just thinking I could use Suzuki sensor instead of trying to mount aftermarket one Quote Link to comment
Dezza Posted December 13, 2022 Share Posted December 13, 2022 14 hours ago, Kimberkatana said: I'm putting a MK2 1200 bandit engine in a MK1 teapot but am thinking I want modern dash/clocks so already got drilled output shaft , was just thinking I could use Suzuki sensor instead of trying to mount aftermarket one Should be easy peasy as the output shaft is designed to take the sender unit. If you need a sender to bolt onto the output shaft I have a brand new one I don't need. Quote Link to comment
Joseph Posted December 13, 2022 Share Posted December 13, 2022 I use a Koso DB01 with a bandit sprocket cover and it works no problem at all Quote Link to comment
Joseph Posted December 13, 2022 Share Posted December 13, 2022 And there is always the Kawasaki sprocket nut trick if needing to avoid drilling or for depth issues : 2 Quote Link to comment
rodneya Posted December 13, 2022 Share Posted December 13, 2022 If you run a Koso gauge you always have the option of a gps speed signal converter. https://www.oemcycle.com/Item/product/900561604/noRediR=1/ 1 Quote Link to comment
Joseph Posted December 13, 2022 Share Posted December 13, 2022 (edited) Thats a hell of a price for something you can do without. Just need to cut off the sensor off the Koso thing, and either plug or solder the wires onto the bandit sensor I have found it much more reliable in response than using the magnets in the disc screw shoddy system Edited December 13, 2022 by Joseph Quote Link to comment
clivegto Posted December 14, 2022 Share Posted December 14, 2022 @Josephhow easy was it to program the koso with the suzuki sender? Quote Link to comment
Joseph Posted December 14, 2022 Share Posted December 14, 2022 Well thats the thing. Instructions say you're supposed to count the number of magnets/sensor points. I found that putting 4 (as per the bandit rotor) didn't yield any realistic result. I put in the tyre circumference, and then taped my phone in GPS mode to the tank and played around with the number of sensor points till it matched the speedo reading. For my bike 1990 (tyre circumference in mm for a 120 70 17) and 11 sensor points give spot on GPS speed reading. I'm guessing any Koso dash must use the same software, so could be that setting to put in regardless of the model of dash used 1 Quote Link to comment
clivegto Posted December 14, 2022 Share Posted December 14, 2022 Thanks that's very interesting Quote Link to comment
coombehouse Posted December 16, 2022 Share Posted December 16, 2022 On 12/14/2022 at 12:42 PM, Joseph said: Well thats the thing. Instructions say you're supposed to count the number of magnets/sensor points. I found that putting 4 (as per the bandit rotor) didn't yield any realistic result. I put in the tyre circumference, and then taped my phone in GPS mode to the tank and played around with the number of sensor points till it matched the speedo reading. For my bike 1990 (tyre circumference in mm for a 120 70 17) and 11 sensor points give spot on GPS speed reading. I'm guessing any Koso dash must use the same software, so could be that setting to put in regardless of the model of dash used I like your idea but if we are talking about using the bandit gearbox sensor, the circumference would be related to the rear tyre not the front? Then you also have to take into consideration the gearing too. I would think a better starting point would be to measure the distance traveled by a rotating rear tyre for 4 sensor points. That is unless I've totally misunderstood things. Quote Link to comment
Joseph Posted December 16, 2022 Share Posted December 16, 2022 (edited) 7 hours ago, coombehouse said: I like your idea but if we are talking about using the bandit gearbox sensor, the circumference would be related to the rear tyre not the front? Then you also have to take into consideration the gearing too. I would think a better starting point would be to measure the distance traveled by a rotating rear tyre for 4 sensor points. That is unless I've totally misunderstood things. Dunno mate i'm too stupid to not just follow the instructions When i saw that with 4 sensor points i was reading 250km/h in town, i figured that the factor that was mistaken was the number of points, not the wheel diameter So just did as above with a GPS on the phone. Took me 3 short runs on the dual carriage way. Put it at 10, dropped one, raised 2 to 11 and it was exactly what the GPS was giving. Edited December 16, 2022 by Joseph Quote Link to comment
bluedog59 Posted December 16, 2022 Share Posted December 16, 2022 You're all missing a trick here. I fitted early GSXR600 clocks on my B12 MK1 using a MK2 trigger and pickup and got 10 mph more top speed. Best tuning mod ever. 4 Quote Link to comment
Dezza Posted December 17, 2022 Share Posted December 17, 2022 (edited) When it comes to Koso gauges, the instructions for my unit are the same as above, although I use an RX2N. When using the set up, simply enter the circumferance of the tyre for the wheel the sensor is on (mm), the number of pulses the sensor receives per wheel rotation and you're good to go. My guess is the guage is set to calculate the number of pulses per km, so this will have to be accounted for when using the output shaft rather than the wheel directly. If the final drive reduction ratio is a nice round 3, then this is quite straightforward, set pulses to 12 instead of 4. Problem here is this is usually something like 2.75-2.9, so the tyre circumferance input needs to be changed by using a bit of maths or trial and error using another method of calibration, such as a GPS gizmo as described above. For my Daytona guage, setting the speed input is easier when using a sprocket mounted sensor (see pic). The number of pulses per km can be calculated and then fed into the guage directly on setup. E.g. 2m tyre circumferance, 2.9 final drive gear ratio, 4 pulses per rev on gearbox: (1000/2) x 2.9 x 4 = 5800 pulses per km. Edited December 17, 2022 by Dezza Quote Link to comment
johnr Posted December 17, 2022 Share Posted December 17, 2022 On 12/13/2022 at 12:01 PM, Joseph said: And there is always the Kawasaki sprocket nut trick if needing to avoid drilling or for depth issues : tell us more. ive never heard this. Quote Link to comment
Joseph Posted December 17, 2022 Share Posted December 17, 2022 (edited) 14 minutes ago, johnr said: tell us more. ive never heard this. Several kawasakis use a front sprocket sensor for the speedo like the mk2 Bandit Suzuki system fits a small rotor with notches and studs (4), it screws onto the gearbox ouput shaft, which is threaded for the purpose. Kawasaki use a better system for us people who like adaptations : the nut that holds the sprocket on is a specific shaped one, with 4 faces/edges that act as pickup points for the sensor. Why people still try to drill their gearbox shafts beats me These nuts are readily available, same thread as Suzuki and if you need depth clearance they can be machined down a tad to suit. Fitted to : W650 : 1999-2006 W800 : 2011-2016 ZX10R : 2003-2006 ZX6R : 1998-2003 ZX9R : 1998-2003 Edited December 17, 2022 by Joseph 3 Quote Link to comment
johnr Posted December 17, 2022 Share Posted December 17, 2022 14 minutes ago, Joseph said: Several kawasakis use a front sprocket sensor for the speedo like the mk2 Bandit Suzuki system fits a small rotor with notches and studs (4), it screws onto the gearbox ouput shaft, which is threaded for the purpose. Kawasaki use a better system for us people who like adaptations : the nut that holds the sprocket on is a specific shaped one, with 4 faces/edges that act as pickup points for the sensor. Why people still try to drill their gearbox shafts beats me These nuts are readily available, same thread as Suzuki and if you need depth clearance they can be machined down a tad to suit. Fitted to : W650 : 1999-2006 W800 : 2011-2016 ZX10R : 2003-2006 ZX6R : 1998-2003 ZX9R : 1998-2003 thats brilliant information. ive a gsxr motor in my kat and am looking to fit an electronic speedo but was wondering about the sender. this is why i love this site! 3 Quote Link to comment
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