veloman said:
You guys should be using a bike speedometer, they are more accurate than GPS. Just make sure you measure the tire circumfrence correctly by going one revolution with weight on the tire.
You are joking right? GPS speed with multiple satellite connections (the more the better) is one of the most accurate ways to read your speed. Tires deform from load while riding changing their circumference, cornering can cause a different diameter because you may be on a shorter radius etc etc etc.
If you want to see really really inaccurate speedometers go ride a sport bike. All the guys that claim to go 170mph+ are sadly disappointed when clocked properly by radar or GPS and often find out they only managed high 150's, timing equipment or GPS. I've seen error rates as high as 15% on motorcycle and car speedos at high speed. I have a video of a friend and I doing 190mph GPS on Garmin in his turbo Porsche 996, speedo read like 203, what a joke, not even close, over 6% error.
Much better to calibrate your bike speedo to GPS if you want it to be accurate.