M WHEELS FITTED BUT HAVING A FEW PROBLEMS.

jamiecarpenter

Member
Coventry
Fitted some twin spoke alloys on my 3.0l z4 on tuesday, which came off a z4m so the backs hang out slightly, not a problem I thought. But I have found that when I am driving around and using the satnav the satnav is no longer reading correctly and is 20 yards short on junctions. I understand that there is a slight issue with speed at over reading by 3.5% so i guess this is the same with distance also. Has anyone else come across this issue and found a way of resolving it? (intravee etc?
 
jamiecarpenter said:
Fitted some twin spoke alloys on my 3.0l z4 on tuesday, which came off a z4m so the backs hang out slightly, not a problem I thought. But I have found that when I am driving around and using the satnav the satnav is no longer reading correctly and is 20 yards short on junctions. I understand that there is a slight issue with speed at over reading by 3.5% so i guess this is the same with distance also. Has anyone else come across this issue and found a way of resolving it? (intravee etc?

Have you got M spec tyre sizes too?
My rolling diameter is increased slightly from the norm by going to 265/30/19 but my sat nave is fine.

Surely it uses GPS so should just work :? (except for when it has no GPS and goes off the speed sensor)
 
Surely the sat Nav is GPS, so shoudlnt be affected by the wheel rotations?

Have you retrofitted the Sat Nav? Has the problem only occured since the wheels?

Were you in a built up area at the time? Just wandering if the GPS was multipathing?
 
An odd one Jamie as I didn't have this issue when I changed to the same alloys as you


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Not sure this will be of much help, I had a built in sat nav on my previous car (VW) and it not only relied on the GPS but also the ABS sensor (for the wheel rotation) and so the wheel diameter, because of this there was a setting where you had to set for your wheel diameter and adjust should this change. I assume there might be something similar for the sat nav in BMWs?
 
CornishRob said:
Surely the sat Nav is GPS, so shoudlnt be affected by the wheel rotations?

Have you retrofitted the Sat Nav? Has the problem only occured since the wheels?

Were you in a built up area at the time? Just wandering if the GPS was multipathing?
If the car doesn't have GPS signal though it uses the rotation of the wheels to calculate the position. If the size is too big then it'll mis-judge it.
My money is on the tyres (if they're not standard).
 
If thats the case, then the GPS may not be working correctly?

Get it in an open space and see if the GPS positions the car correctly. If it doesnt, you may have a GPS issue, which is meaning its using the wheel sensors as in the posts above, which now wont be calibrated properly.
 
You can recalibrate the GPS settings from within a secret menu, however I only know how to do it on the professional sat nav as in mine. You hold the menu button for 10 seconds after you have entered the general settings menu.
Once in there, you will find an option for recalibrating the GPS which essentially involves you driving slowly towards a known junction, in a known direction, then hitting the set.
I'll try and look out the video that explains it when I'm not on iPhone :-)
 
It won't work off wheel rotation as it is completely inaccurate. I would suggest using a bit more and working out if in reality it is actually out.
 
Steve220 said:
It won't work off wheel rotation as it is completely inaccurate. I would suggest using a bit more and working out if in reality it is actually out.
agree with above, there is no way it is using the wheels. Rolling radius changes when tread depth drops and what about when the wheels spin. My nav used to have the odd hiccup where it would show me driving in the houses rather than on the road, it usually resolved itself in a matter of minutes though. My guess would be its either always done it and as you've changed the wheels your playing safe and looking for problems or it was just having one of those days.


Tapatalking on my iPhone.......
 
A GPS position has nothing to do with anything on the car. Aftermarket GPS devices that you fix to the windscreen can be ported between vehicles. The signal is sent from the device into the air where a satellite essentially bounces it back to the device, a minimum of three satellites are need to correctly give a position.
On a factory fitted sat nav there may be an external ariel fitted to the car to boost the signal, but it wouldn't be affected by the choice of wheels.

Coincidence I think.
 
just put the old wheel back on and test? if satnav works then its defo an issue with the new alloy setup
 
When the car doesnt pick up a GPS signal is will run off the speedo... this is one of few advantages of using the dated built in nav.

I have driven under long tunnels and the nav still moves the position of the car, with no GPS signal + fitted a built in Nav to my old Toyota.. and i had to splice into the speed sensor loom.
 
peddy said:
As mentioned before... if there's no GPS (e.g. tunnels) it uses the wheel sensor...

Correct, also many built-in systems also have gyroscopes in them to detect direction changes of the vehicle and the Sat Nav uses these additional inputs to calculate the position when GPS is lost. In large built up areas with high rise buildings GPS outages can be a real problem and so these systems compensate for this until the GPS signal is re-aquired.
 
You have the logic of this back to front guys as to which (GPS or sensors) is the primary signal. Don't mix the Z4 GPS up with standalone Tom Tom type units which simply use GPS signal.

The Zed uses wheel sensors to calculate rotation (variances gives direction) and ABS on rear left wheel to calculate speed. Reverse light switch is used to determine forward or backward travel. The system also uses a 'gyro value', which I'm not sure if it's a gyro unit or some derived value.

The GPS is used at initiallisation and re-initialisation (ie to calculate the start position). It's also checked to then correct any errors in wheel rotation by matching against lattitute and longitude readings plus GMT time).

This method can easliy explain OP's issue of it becoming inaccurate by 20 yards leading to a junction.It's also why the system is far superior to others (of its era) in towns, trees, tunnels, etc.

Tyre issues are where I'd put my money and once that's checked/rectified I'd be looking at the GPS signal.
 
That's incredible Phil!! Ranski did tell me that if you didn't know about something on the Zed then it's not worth bothering about :D
 
Think Phil is probably right. looked into the tyres sizes. The wheels I took off F225/45/ZR18 R255/40/ZR18 the ones I've put on F225/40ZR18
R255/35/ZR18. Certainly found the ride is smoother being deeper. Also had a thought that if it is the tyres throwing off the gps will it throw out the odometer also?
 
jamiecarpenter said:
Think Phil is probably right. looked into the tyres sizes. The wheels I took off F225/45/ZR18 R255/40/ZR18 the ones I've put on F225/40ZR18
R255/35/ZR18. Certainly found the ride is smoother being deeper. Also had a thought that if it is the tyres throwing off the gps will it throw out the odometer also?

Quick check on a tyre calculator gives you a -3.48% difference in diameter. (Speedo reads 60 will be doing 58)

Doesn't sound much but after just 500m you'd be almost out by your 20m error.
 
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