klw033 wrote:
My interest in a digital tach came when balancing the engine. The mechanical tach, original to the airplane, was 100+ RPM off...
That is pretty common among mechanical tachs. It is also why good prop balancing systems use their own calibrated tach and why it isn’t recommended to set up new or overhauled engines using the aircraft instruments. As long as it is consistent it is pretty easy to live with. One aircraft I don’t own but fly quite a bit is pretty accurate on cool days but off by as much as 200 rpm on hot days. I use manifold and fuel pressures to set rpm on that one and verify with a “true tach”, if I remember to grab it.