I like that, how did you mount it?
It will need to be calibrated, but it's simple enough. Sometimes it predicts high, sometimes it predicts low. On long highway trips it could be very optimistic or under-estimate, but then again I only have it half calibrated.jake75 wrote:How accurate can the mpg value be? I like my gps as it accurately tell me my mph.
I think that's a good idea but I hate cords and things not looking flush. I even dislike the aux cord out of the radio. I imagine the battery drain would be tremendous if you constantly run it.canadave wrote:I have yet to try any solutions; but I'm planning to. And when I do, it would be by using an ELM327 OBD2 Bluetooth dongle, in conjunction with Torque on an Android phone.
you have a picture that shows your setup in daylight?KITT222 wrote:Velcro to the center bezel. It slightly overlaps the A/C button and the vent, but I'm fine with it.
Not currently, but I can see about getting one tomorrow.mrbravo2000 wrote:you have a picture that shows your setup in daylight?KITT222 wrote:Velcro to the center bezel. It slightly overlaps the A/C button and the vent, but I'm fine with it.
The mini ELM327 doesn't have a cord; it's a very small dongle that just plugs directly into the OBD2 port, no cords whatsoever due to it being Bluetooth, which wirelessly connects to your Android phone. There is a similar dongle, slightly more expensive (but less expensive than those ScanGauge/UltraGauges) that can work with iOS over WiFi.mrbravo2000 wrote:I think that's a good idea but I hate cords and things not looking flush. I even dislike the aux cord out of the radio. I imagine the battery drain would be tremendous if you constantly run it.canadave wrote:I have yet to try any solutions; but I'm planning to. And when I do, it would be by using an ELM327 OBD2 Bluetooth dongle, in conjunction with Torque on an Android phone.
Not necessarily true. The OBDII port on most (possibly all?) vehicles is powered even with ignition off and key out. ScanGuage and others have actually had to work pretty hard to come up with various ways depending on the vehicle to detect when the car is off and power off all but the bare minimum the device itself needs to re-detect startup. Several iterations of firmware have done this less than successfully and lead to battery drain problems on some vehicles. My ELM327 dongle certainly gets power even with the vehicle off, though it eventually puts itself to sleep. I opted for one with a physical power button that definitely cuts the power connection so I can be sure it won't drain the battery when I'm not using it.joatmon wrote:with the scangauge, and others that get power from the ODBII port, the power is cut when ignition is off, so battery drain is not an issue
I looked into that dongle, that's pretty dope. I like that. I've seen the scan gauge but the screen looks plain and seems to be hard to look at. I have an Android and a Windows Phone and it appears both have programs that support the feature with an app. I might ant brain drain on the phone but I'm glad you answered the vehicle battery issue as well. I saw the Torque app, looks impressive from the screenshots.canadave wrote:The mini ELM327 doesn't have a cord; it's a very small dongle that just plugs directly into the OBD2 port, no cords whatsoever due to it being Bluetooth, which wirelessly connects to your Android phone. There is a similar dongle, slightly more expensive (but less expensive than those ScanGauge/UltraGauges) that can work with iOS over WiFi.mrbravo2000 wrote:I think that's a good idea but I hate cords and things not looking flush. I even dislike the aux cord out of the radio. I imagine the battery drain would be tremendous if you constantly run it.canadave wrote:I have yet to try any solutions; but I'm planning to. And when I do, it would be by using an ELM327 OBD2 Bluetooth dongle, in conjunction with Torque on an Android phone.
As for battery drain, I've no idea about that. The drain on the ELM327 is supposedly quite minimal. The drain on a phone, I'm not so sure, but there's plenty of internet threads about it if you care to research it.
Mine is a bit optimistic too, but I haven't worried about it much. For my GT, I have the engine size at 2.4, weight at 1500 kg, e10 fuel, 13.2 gal capacity, 0.0 boost adj, 6400 max RPM, 85.0 volumetric efficiency, 1.0 for MPG trim, and 1.0 speed multiplier. Mine reads about 25-26 MPG while my calculations are about 24-25. I really use it for the MPH and the instant MPG so I can try to drive more efficiently. Love coasting at 255 MPG!IanVS wrote:For those of you running Torque Pro, how accurate have you found the gas mileage to be? Mine seems to be a little optimistic. What kinds of calibration have you done (volumetric efficiency or MPG trim)? I guess I just need to fill up, take a long trip, fill up at the end, and compare the results, unless anyone else can share their numbers and get me closer.