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fuel
Posted: Fri Apr 26, 2002 9:09 am
by Eric Sturgis
dose anyone know if the use of 100 low lead would hurt my bike. Or race gas
110 octane.
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fuel
Posted: Fri Apr 26, 2002 9:28 am
by Zachariah Mully
Um, not to belabor the obvious, but why? The KLR engine isn't a
high-compression race engine, so what's 110 octane race-gas gonna do,
other than burn a hole in your wallet and keep it from pinging?
I ran 85 octane in mine once (found it in the boondocks of WV, didn't
even know such a beast existed) and I had no pinging or other problems.
Probably got better mileage as well.
Then again, perhaps I don't understand what exactly race-gas is... I
thought it was just ultra high octane.
Z
DC
On Fri, 2002-04-26 at 10:09, Eric Sturgis wrote:
> dose anyone know if the use of 100 low lead would hurt my bike. Or race gas
> 110 octane.
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device:
http://mobile.msn.com
>
fuel
Posted: Fri Apr 26, 2002 9:42 am
by Devon Jarvis
It won't hurt your bike, just your wallet like Zack said. In fact you
may get lower performance with the race gas since it's harder to ignite.
Race gas doesn't give more performance by itself at all. Higher
compression and more ignition advance give more performance, race gas
merely keeps a such a high-tuned motor from detonating itself to pieces.
Do you have an airport nearby?
Devon
Eric Sturgis wrote:
fuel
Posted: Fri Apr 26, 2002 9:46 am
by klrz4ever
> dose anyone know if the use of 100 low lead would hurt my bike. Or
race gas
> 110 octane.
Eric,
I can't say whether these gasolines will hurt your bike, but they
will hurt your pocketbook and won't give you any more power. You only
need a higher octane gas if your bike is pinging. There's a common
misconception that more octane = more power. Not true. Higher octane
allows high compression engines (not the KLR by any stretch) to
develop more power because it prevents detonation. In lower
compression engines, high octane gas is a waste of money.
__Arden Kysely
fuel
Posted: Fri Apr 26, 2002 11:38 am
by Mark
At 9:09 AM -0500 4/26/02, Eric Sturgis wrote:
>dose anyone know if the use of 100 low lead would hurt my bike.
Just 'cause I got it for free, I used to put 100LL in my KZ650 back
when I lived near Philly. The KZ seemed to like it and it was
trouble-free. I love the smell of burning avgas in the morning!
I also heated my house with Jet A for free.
Mark
B2
A2
A3
fuel
Posted: Fri Apr 26, 2002 2:00 pm
by RM
On 26 Apr 2002, Zachariah Mully wrote:
>I ran 85 octane in mine once (found it in the boondocks of WV, didn't
>even know such a beast existed) and I had no pinging or other problems.
>Probably got better mileage as well.
Such low octane fuel is normally found at higher altitudes. I ran several
tanks of 86 and one tank of 85 on my recent trip. Bike had no problem
with it.
fuel
Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 9:46 am
by Lourd Baltimore
OK,
Pretty ridiculous question, but...
I just got a used KLR650, but I have no owner's manual.
Is 87 octane fine to use? Are there any benefits from using fuel with a higher octane rating?
Thanks,
doofus
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fuel
Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 10:42 am
by Walter Mitty
Yep, 87 will work fine and that is what is specified. I tend to drive like an old lady around town and find that 89 seems to provoke less of the diesel like tendencies although this may be my imagination. On the highway I can't tell the difference between 87 and 89 . . . except of course for the price.
Lourd Baltimore wrote:OK,
Pretty ridiculous question, but...
I just got a used KLR650, but I have no owner's manual.
Is 87 octane fine to use? Are there any benefits from using fuel with a higher octane rating?
Thanks,
doofus
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fuel
Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 3:11 pm
by karim khaldi
thanks guys, that's a very good question.
I just bought a new klr, and was wondering which one i should use.
so, you said you don't notice much difference ?
so far i have been using only 91 (luxury !!), but next time i will put 87 to
try.
regards,
-k-
On 11/12/05, Walter Mitty wrote:
>
> Yep, 87 will work fine and that is what is specified. I tend to drive like
> an old lady around town and find that 89 seems to provoke less of the diesel
> like tendencies although this may be my imagination. On the highway I can't
> tell the difference between 87 and 89 . . . except of course for the price.
>
> Lourd Baltimore wrote:OK,
>
> Pretty ridiculous question, but...
>
> I just got a used KLR650, but I have no owner's manual.
> Is 87 octane fine to use? Are there any benefits from using fuel with a
> higher octane rating?
>
> Thanks,
>
> doofus
>
>
>
>
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fuel
Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 6:12 pm
by Rick McCauley
The manual says 91 minimum. I use 93. I have tried all, and mine likes the 93 best.
Rick A17
Lourd Baltimore wrote:
OK,
Pretty ridiculous question, but...
I just got a used KLR650, but I have no owner's manual.
Is 87 octane fine to use? Are there any benefits from using fuel with a higher octane rating?
Thanks,
doofus
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Archive Quicksearch at:
http://www.angelfire.com/ut/moab/klr650_data_search.html
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