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Old 12-10-2013, 07:30 AM
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Originally Posted by white08gt
Ford usually sets the speed limiter at the speed rating of your factory tires.
Makes sense.
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Old 12-10-2013, 07:54 AM
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Originally Posted by white08gt
Ford usually sets the speed limiter at the speed rating of your factory tires.
Are you messing around with him or being serious?
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Old 12-10-2013, 07:59 AM
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I think f150s its all the same, right at 99 100. Regardless of what tires you have.
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Old 12-10-2013, 08:03 AM
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Originally Posted by Ecofx86
I think f150s its all the same, right at 99 100. Regardless of what tires you have.
Exactly, I think the xl trucks may be 95, if it was off of tire size my truck would of come with a speed limiter of 118.
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Old 12-10-2013, 08:11 AM
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tire rating/speed limiter applies toward sport cars.
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Old 12-10-2013, 11:16 AM
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Long live the Governor:



Oh wrong Governor......
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Old 12-10-2013, 11:25 AM
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THE reason for the F-150's speed limitation ...
Drive line Critical speed

What it is – Every rotating object has a “critical” speed or resonant speed, which is a function of its design, mass and stiffness. This is when the driveshaft is whipping in the middle, rather than spinning on a true centerline. For a driveshaft, this is also called “first bending mode”, indicating the shaft actually bows out into a boomerang shape (on a micro-scale). This first mode bending speed is usually referred to in a driveshaft frequency.

What it does – The energy stored and released through the deflection of the driveshaft through the resonance creates lateral and vertical accelerations of >10g at the problem frequency, which results in broken transmission extension housings, cases and causes moderate to severe vibration at highway speeds (> 70 mph), particularly with axle ratios numerically higher than 3.27:1. This energy release, when compounded by excessive driveshaft imbalance (some is good, too much or too little is not), companion flange run out/imbalance and excessive driveline angles provides the driver with excessive vibration and boom and tortures the driver and driveline components in general.

Because of this, most vehicles have a speed limiter to prevent from entering this mode and causing damage to the driveline.Example of an after-market driveshaft spec's ...
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Old 12-10-2013, 11:26 AM
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Originally Posted by Azuri
Long live the Governor: Oh wrong Governor......
Totally what I thought this thread was going to be about too. Geez I've lost it
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Old 12-10-2013, 11:43 AM
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Originally Posted by gdmjoe
the reason for the f-150's speed limitation ...
drive line critical speed

what it is – every rotating object has a “critical” speed or resonant speed, which is a function of its design, mass and stiffness. This is when the driveshaft is whipping in the middle, rather than spinning on a true centerline. For a driveshaft, this is also called “first bending mode”, indicating the shaft actually bows out into a boomerang shape (on a micro-scale). This first mode bending speed is usually referred to in a driveshaft frequency.

what it does – the energy stored and released through the deflection of the driveshaft through the resonance creates lateral and vertical accelerations of >10g at the problem frequency, which results in broken transmission extension housings, cases and causes moderate to severe vibration at highway speeds (> 70 mph), particularly with axle ratios numerically higher than 3.27:1. This energy release, when compounded by excessive driveshaft imbalance (some is good, too much or too little is not), companion flange run out/imbalance and excessive driveline angles provides the driver with excessive vibration and boom and tortures the driver and driveline components in general.

Because of this, most vehicles have a speed limiter to prevent from entering this mode and causing damage to the driveline.example of an after-market driveshaft spec's ...
you can feel this the aster you go, that why i do not drive over 70, dont get me wrong i still go 0 to 70 real fast.
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Old 12-10-2013, 01:26 PM
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I shouldn't be doing 125 plus?
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