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T5 Speedometer Gear Calculator

Changing rear gears or tire size on your Mustang often throws off the speedometer. Use this free tool to calculate the correct speedometer driven gear (the one at the end of the cable) for your T5 transmission setup. It also helps you identify your internal drive gear to ensure accuracy.

Note: Always verify calculations independently before purchasing parts. Results are estimates and may vary based on actual tire dimensions, manufacturing tolerances, and wear.

Vehicle Details
Tire Size
/
R

Calculated Diameter: "

Results

Ford T5 Speedometer Gear Color Chart

Ford color-codes their speedometer gears based on tooth count. Whether you have a plot-in (cable) or electronic sensor setup, the gear colors remain consistent for the Type 17271 gears used in T5, C4, and Toploader transmissions.

Tooth CountColor
16Wine
17White
18Yellow
19Pink
20Black
21Red
23White

How to Identify Your T5 Drive Gear

The Drive Gear is located inside the transmission on the output shaft. You cannot change this without removing the tail shaft housing. Knowing which one you have is critical for the calculator accurately.

  • 7-Tooth (Yellow): The most common gear for 1983-1989 V8 World Class T5s.
  • 8-Tooth (Green): Standard on 1990-1995 V8 World Class T5s. Also common on aftermarket "Z-Spec" T5s.
  • 6-Tooth (Black): Typically found in 4-cylinder T5s or early non-WC units.

Frequently Asked Questions

If your speedometer reads faster than your actual speed, your driven gear likely has too few teeth. For example, if the calculator calls for a 20-tooth gear and you have a 19-tooth installed, the cable spins faster than proper calibration, causing a high reading. You need a gear with higher tooth count to slow it down.

For standard Ford housings, 21 teeth (Red) is the practical limit for longevity. There is a 23-tooth (White) gear available (popular in Jeep circles but fits Ford), but the teeth are very thin and prone to stripping quickly ("chewed up" gears). If you need a 23-tooth gear, we highly recommend changing your internal drive gear to a 7-tooth or 6-tooth instead to bring the requirement back down to the durable 17-21 range.

Yes, it should. The Ford speedometer gear formula and the "Type 17271" driven gears are the same for the C4, Toploader, T5, Tremec 3550/TKO, and AOD transmissions. However, the drive gear tooth counts inside those transmissions may vary from the T5 defaults listed above.

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