As you know the earlier style speedos uses a screw on end and the later style uses a clip on end. But you can't just use a cable from an earlier model. I found the earlier style cable to be too short to reach the transmission. Or at least if you order one for a 1970 model. I don't know why unless it exits the firewall in a different location. Perhaps if I ordered a cable from a 1977 model it would have been the correct length. Anybody know for sure?
The popular conversion is to source a 140 mph speedometer from a 1978 model but these are kind of rare being a one year only deal.
My "fix" was to lay both speedometer cables side by side, remove the cable from the sleeve and cut the sleeves in the same location about 6" from the speedometer end. Then swapped ends and crimped a piece of 5/16" tubing over both of the sleeves and wrapped them with electrical tape. That created a longer cable with a screw on connector. This has been working fine for about 15 years.
Back in the summer my speedometer starting going nuts. It got to where it was reading higher than normal, might not work at all then this is what it was reading at around 60 mph.

Then one day it stopped working altogether. So I'm not sure if it's the speedometer or the cable. At any rate I'm going back to another 85 mph speedometer because I don't have another 140 mph speedometer.
But here is the thing. Even before I swapped out speedos or final drives, the speedometer has never been correct. I could be doing 60 mph and the speedometer would peg out at 85 mph with the old speedometer.
This was before I installed a 4.1:1 final drive after the pinion gear in the original 3.8:1 final drive broke.
The only thing I can think of that would throw the speedometer off that much was I switched to 14" 60 series tires on Panasports after I bought this car. I think the Spiders originally came with 13" 80 series tires. So by dropping down about one inch diameter tires would that have messed the speedometer up that much? Well assuming a "series" equals one inch.
As you may know, the gear drive is what determines how fast the speedometer turns. You can swap out an 85 mph speedometer for a 140 mph speedometer and will not affect the calibration. So I have read. Also unless you cut an access hole out in the driveshaft tunnel, the gear drive cannot be removed unless you drop the transmission. I'm not in the mood to do that.
As of right now I have:
14" 60 series tires
4.1:1 final drive
unknown gear drive in the transmission.
I've got a spare 85 mph speedometer from a 1981 model I plan on installing and a new cable unless my cable is about to break causing it to act weird.
All I need to know is if I want to correct this issue and get my speedometer to read correctly, what is the fix? I've heard there is a gear reduction thing that fits between the cable and speedometer or cable and transmission that will fix the problem.
Just wondering if anyone has done this and how to do it, where to get it...