Results 1 to 10 of 21
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September 14th, 2007 12:26 AM #1
info nman guys about these meter. just to shed some enlightenment to some people including me....
a) is this what we call the odometer?
b) ung nasa blue box - what is that? the kms traveled?
c) ung nasa blue box - how do you read it? is it five hundred seventy seven OR five thousand seven hundred seventy four?
d) ung nasa red box - is it the kilometers traveled?
e) ung nasa red box - how do you read it? is it seventeen thousand and twenty? OR one hundred seventy thousand two hundred six?
f) if we say mileage - is it in the red or blue box?
g) the one in the blue box can be reset manually by pushing the button near it (not shown in pic), but how about the one in red box? can it also be reset? is it advisable to reset it?
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September 14th, 2007 12:29 AM #2
Hard to know what red and blue boxes you're talking about without pics.
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September 14th, 2007 12:42 AM #4
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September 14th, 2007 12:43 AM #5
The red one is the odometer (total distance travelled by the car). It cannot be reset. It is against the law to tamper with it. On your example it reads 170,206kms.
The blue one is a trip meter. Total distance travelled since the trip meter was last reset. On your example it reads 577.4kms.
Distance is usually in kilometers except in some imported vehicles wherein it is in miles (roughly 1.6Kms to a mile).
Mileage usually quotes figures from the odometer.
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September 14th, 2007 01:11 AM #6
Sir OTEP, can you shed more light on the law which prohibits tampering of the odometer.
I am not in favor of the odometer to be reset or reversed. Unfortunately, a lot of 2nd hand dealers are doing this. Do we have any idea what are the penalty of this action under the law?
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September 14th, 2007 01:19 AM #7
AFAIK, there is still no local legislation specific to this act. At least none that I know of. I was pertaining to legislation in foreign markets.
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September 14th, 2007 01:27 AM #8
I see..pero I think that dapat meron magsulong ng law na ito. Kasi definitely na pandaraya ito. Very valuable information kasi ito para sa isang car owner. It would determine when to replace critical parts of the car before breaking down.
The thing is dapat cguro yearly or everytime mag renew ng registration, maganda cguro i reflect sa reciept yung odometer reading para madali mahuli kung inatras.
my 2 cents.
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September 14th, 2007 04:39 AM #9
Some cars present themselves brand new with a lot of problems, while some have so many miles/km but nary a problem. Why? It's all about maintenance. You can judge from the looks and the equipment use (wear and tear) if the odometer has been tampered with. Whether you suspect it or not, always ask for maintenance records.
Basically read it this way. Odometer reading is read xxx,xxx miles or km, while the tripmeter below it will read xxx.x miles. The tripmeter only goes up to 999.9 miles or km, while the odometer can go to 999,999 miles or km, after which it rolls over.
The trip meter can be reset to 000.0 when filling up to calculate fuel economy, or when calculating distance travelled. The odometer, on the other hand, cannot be reset. There will be two buttons usually on the dash, some have one. Pressing one of them will reset the tripmeter.
FWIW, I've seen several cars on eBay that are 10-15 years old yet only have 2xxx miles on them, another had 4xxx miles. The pictures proved it, as in halos bago sila, parang fresh off the showroom floor. Owners were old men if I remember correctly, and both were parked in an airconditioned garage. Grabe!
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September 14th, 2007 08:55 PM #10
another follow up question, kelan ba umiikot ung last digit na nasa red box?? every 100 ba ng nasa blue box? every 10 ba ng nasa blue box? or sabay sila nung last digit ng nasa blue box ng ikot???
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