New mechanical speedometer drive solution
https://m.roadkillcustoms.com/electr...ve-conversion/
It seems the cable driver in a box is still a very popular method. $350 price range is not bad. There is room for this price to come down, but it will require some competition

I also found this patent this morning for a electric motor driven mechanical speedometer from 1947! Patent number US2657919A
Here is the video of some of the work.
So, yes, it can be done. You are probably better off just buying an off the shelf solution. If you like to tinker and want to build your own then go for it!
https://youtu.be/5j_ww0Dexxg
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Types that I've thought are possible or already in use.
-1. Mechanical - isn't that why we are here, looking for other solutions, no thank you
1. Motor in a box - that drives your mechanical speedometer. I'm not a fan of this principle, but I like how it has been managed. Congrats to those who've made it work - impressive @gjestico .
2. Air core motor - 80s and 90s technology that I've heard is not to most reliable? or precise? - I think this would be my favorite option if still supported by anyone. It's not a motor, it's an analog device (not sure what to really call it). Best part is, once set, it's repeatable
3. Stepper motor - The tiny ones you can find on ebay/amazon for a few bucks each that requires a microcontroller and driving chip that seems to only be made by companies that will only deal with companies with serious money... maybe I'm not entirely accurate on this, but... I haven't found jack
4. Hobby servo motor? Has anyone tried this? 50Hz (20ms) Pulse width modulation with a 1 to 2 ms pulse on time for positioning. This is my current favorite option. I have a Velocio(.net) PLC that cost me $50 and I'm (slowly) working on an idea to test hobby servo with the velocio. The velocio is able to read about any transmission pulse signal, scale that signal and feed it to the hobby servo, scale that to anything. The only unknown is durability. But that could easily be swapped with another servo of another brand and rescaled.
So I love the hobby servo option because they use a fairly standard footprint between servos. The velocio has an option for free "HMI" software, and USB to the device. So anyone reading this could learn to connect and adjust the "scaling" to make it match your vehicle. This leaves mounting the servo up to you. If I make progress on this, I will update here.
I'm posting this as an update and to know if anyone has considered a hobby servo as an option? Microcontollers (like Arduino) or the Velocio PLC are great options. I like the Velocio because I'm planning on controlling more than just the speedometer with the same unit. May I have something sooner than later.
My point here would be, no one on the planet offers an aftermarket mechanical odometer anything. Only OEM style replacement for the OEM cluster... driven by OEM mechanical.









