Speedometer Installation Tips
A bicycle speedometer is most useful, not as a speedometer ("I know I was doing at least 25 when I hit the tree, because I was trying to read my speedometer at the time..."), but as an odometer. Every bicycle guidebook gives riding instructions in terms of the distance you've traveled ("At exactly 1.67 miles, watch for a faint singletrack leading up a small gully to your right...") If you don't have a speedometer, you won't do well at exploring new trail systems.Because speedometers are easily broken off in a crash (and even more easily broken off when the bike is placed upside-down to remove a flat tire), may I suggest you use riser handlebars (which bend upward at the ends) or bar ends. Angled slightly upward, bar ends form a protective pocket for the speedometer.
To keep the wire from being yanked out of the mounting, use an extra cable tie to secure it to the handlebar a short distance from the mounting.
Secure the wire with cable ties above and below any areas that bend or flex. Be sure you're leaving enough laxity between the handlebar and front fork, so the front wheel can turn fully in both directions without tightening the wire.
Usually, the magnet should pass the detector with about 1/4 inch of the detector's tip on the other side of the magnet.
But if you have a Lefty shock, as shown here, you may need to get inventive. (Or, you'll need a rear wheel mounting kit, which has a longer cable.)
Get a thick-walled drinking straw. With small thin-tipped scissors, cut a spiral down the length of the straw. See the photo.
(For extra protection, consider wrapping the wire with electrical tape before sliding on the straw.)
If there's extra wire, loop it up and secure it with cable ties in a protected spot, for example under the handlebar.