GPS Speedo

carlos515

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Aug 23, 2020
Messages
295
I have a complete gauge set that was to go in my Sunray restoration. The gauges are Faria Euro design. Totally different from the 5-inch Newport gauges in the boat now.
Now is there a big difference between performance from the GPS and pitot tube speedos ? I will have to change all my gauges, so deciding if it is worth the effort as, if it ain't broke don't mess with it, keeps popping in my thoughts on this one.
I have installed a new dual battery system, audio system, speakers, and a xintex gas fume detector system. Waiting for a Hook 2 -9 TS FF. This would be my last mod that I think I need.....lol
 

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jlh3rd

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Jul 10, 2017
Messages
1,044
I installed a GPS speedometer in my pontoon. Great accuracy, no more clogged line to clear.
 

jlh3rd

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Jul 10, 2017
Messages
1,044
Meant to add...
Also when fine tuning my trim at speed, it can show speed difference 1 mph +/-....if someone wanted to be that precise.
 

boscoe99

Commander
Joined
Aug 22, 2013
Messages
2,294
Depends upon what speed is desired.

Speed through the water (think boat and motor performance) or speed between two points in space.

Pitot tube or paddle wheel for the former and GPS for the latter.

When taking off and landing aircraft need speed through the air. Not speed over the ground. Thus they use pitot tube speed only is used when landing and taking off.
 

ratdude747

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 30, 2023
Messages
466
I GPS'd my gauges when I redid them as part of a larger overhaul (pitot tube setup was destroyed and useless). But while I mostly used Faria gauges like you chose (literally the same models), I went with a "generic" cheapie LCD unit for the Speedometer as that also grants me heading (never use it, though), trip/total odometers (handy for quantifying fuel mileage), and digital voltage (use it all the time). Does have some glare issues at times, but otherwise, it's great. Although a bit sobering since the speed is "accurate" to the point of there being no room for fluff or other "error in one's favor".

I hid the GPS antenna under my helm's doghouse... well hidden, but can pick up signals through said doghouse's plastic no problem. Should be able to read through fiberglass I'd think... just nothing metal.

I've attached a few pics from my thread on the boat for reference. Other than putting all the gauges on the ACC stud of the ignition switch (originally and as shown, only the GPS speedometer was) and adding an extra wire to tap the bilge pump breaker (upgraded to an automatic bilge pump), the wiring shown is still in use three seasons later.
 

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Last edited:

BWR1953

Admiral
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
6,558
I have a Faria Platinum GPS Speedo. Works great. I tested it by connecting a small 12v battery to it, put on my truck dash and drove it down the road. Accurate! And it has a built in antenna, so none of that mounting it somewhere else stuff.
 

carlos515

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Aug 23, 2020
Messages
295
Thank you all for the advice.....The Newport GPS speedo is discontinued for my boat. I looked at the connections of my gauges and they are all proprietary. As in plug in, not studded. So I am on the hunt for a 5 inch GPS that will blend in. The Kronus looks to be close.
 
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