Jay Gatsby
Well-Known Member
School me on the jump start thing please.I also use it to raise idle for winching, or using the JT to jump start another vehicle.
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School me on the jump start thing please.I also use it to raise idle for winching, or using the JT to jump start another vehicle.
Even in the early 1970s, I was taught to bring the idle up on the vehicle doing the jumping to the dead car/truck to help handle the load instead of all from the battery.School me on the jump start thing please.
Thank you…tazer and jscan have the high idle speed feature to handle loads while running a winch. Works for jump starting, too.
It is probably because it does the calculations for you. Just like the Tazer you enter 35 and it will do the calculations for the actual tire size. I would guess that they don't expect people to go out and actually measure the tire and will just enter the number on the sidewall of the tire IE 35 when most tires are not actually the size printed on the sidewall.BIG BUMP:
Decided to play around with JSCAN. I have Toyo Open County At3s 12.5x50x17 that have a manufactuer diameter of 34.5.
I remember after getting the tires, I had JSCAN set to 34.75 to get the most accurate JEEP odometer vs GPS odometer.
Today having a free day off, for some reason I decided to skim the forums and another JSCAN/tire size came up - so I went down a rabbit hole.
I followed JSCAN's guide to measure the tire from the ground to a the bottom part of a level on top of the tire - which my tire measured at 34.25.
I drove around and got these results: (GPS was NOT connected to the Jeep, it was cell service only)
Jeep odometer: 9.7mi / Stride GPS: 9.93
------the scale factor: 9.93 ÷ 9.7 = 1.0237
So then I changed JSCAN tire size to 34.5 and took another drive:
Jeep odometer: 10mi / Stride GPS: 10.26
------the scale factor: 10.26 ÷ 10.00 = 1.026
So now, I will go back to 34.75in into JSCAN, but it feels so wrong.
Results:
Jeep Odometer: 10.1 / Stride GPS: 10.25
------ The scale factor: 10.25 ÷ 10.10 = 1.0149
Do I go up to 35in in JSCAN?
EDIT:
Okay I went up to 35 in JSCAN.
Jeep odometer: 10.20 mi / GPS distance: 10.25 mi
----- The scale factor10.25 ÷ 10.20 = 1.0049
CLOSE ENOUGH!
But still weird. I don't understand why a tire measuring at 34.25 needs an input of 35 to match Jeep trip odometer and GPS odometer.
Hopefully I can take a longer trip in the next day or so to verify at longer distances.
But I did measure per their instructions and it wasn’t even close.It is probably because it does the calculations for you. Just like the Tazer you enter 35 and it will do the calculations for the actual tire size. I would guess that they don't expect people to go out and actually measure the tire and will just enter the number on the sidewall of the tire IE 35 when most tires are not actually the size printed on the sidewall.
Do you remember which way you went?I did the tape measure thing just to get me in the ballpark and then played with the settings up/down against GPS speed until it sync and called it good.
No, I do not remember. I just went in 1/2" increments and if I over or under shot, backed off to the nearest next increment.Do you remember which way you went?
Actually I did and it was like within two tenths of a mile over 30 miles IIRC.And did you verify JT distance traveled vs gps distanced traveled?
Tire manufacturers stretch the truth on their published tire size. The size is based on the maximum tire pressure on the sidewall and not normal vehicle recommended pressure. So think like 80 PSI vs. 37 PSI will make a bit of a difference.It still seems odd to me that in order to get JT odometer to match a GPS odometer - I have to make the tire size (34.25in under load / 34.5 manufactures spec) go UP to 35in. Usually, it seems that the JSCAN tire input is LESS then manufacturers spec.
My understanding is 3% is the maximum allowable tolerance at time of manufacture.I also saw a post of yours a while back talking about the speed tolerance % and how you may need to change it. Mine was at 0% and the speeds matched up. I believe some vehicle manufactures set it around 3%.