starter trip
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- Posts: 163
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2000 5:31 am
gas mileage
I averaged about 48mpg on Oklahoma gas before the recent pipe and jet kit.
Haven't checked it since the mods but I will post what I get.
Jim
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- Joined: Wed May 10, 2000 10:33 am
gas mileage
None of you are going to believe me, but:
When I rode from Denver to LA, I had a Supertrapp, but the engine was
stock otherwise. I was running Dunlop Trailmaxes, at a little higher
than listed pressure on the highway. Keeping the bike around 65 mph, I
got nearly 65 mpg on the highway. Only way it could be wrong is if the
odo is off. In CA, I typically got 50, and it's dropped a little since
I put the jet kit in and opened the airbox a bit. Probably down to 45.
But there you have it. Yeah, I think the oxygenated gas in CA kills
your mileage. My friend in Oregon has the same problem. If you put
oxygen in the gas, rather than take it all from the air, that's less
energy content.
Chris
--
Dr. J. Christopher Krok Project Engineer, Adaptive Wall Wind Tunnel
Graduate Aeronautical Laboratories, California Institute of Technology
MS 205-45 Phone: 626.395.4794
Pasadena, CA 91125 Fax: 626.449.2677
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- Joined: Wed May 10, 2000 10:33 am
gas mileage
Gee, I've never heard THAT one before!> > That sounds like a crock to me Chris. Har har har.

I'm thinking in terms of the mass that enters the engine. In the carb, a given flow of fuel comes in the fuel side for a given amount of air coming in the air side. If there is oxygen in the fuel, it is taking up mass in the fuel circuit that could be taken up by more fuel instead. Thus, the engine is burning leaner, and you aren't packing as much energy into the cylinder as you could. In other words, the carb doesn't know that oxygen is coming in through the fuel circuit, so it keeps pumping in the same amount of air. Does that make any sense? Parts for the wind tunnel arrive tomorrow, so I have to get things ready, and my posts aren't as well-versed as I'd like them to be! Granted, I'd think that this would give you better gas mileage, since you are running leaner. But, you have to open the throttle more to get the same amount of power as you would otherwise, so you end up burning more fuel overall. Chris -- Dr. J. Christopher Krok Project Engineer, Adaptive Wall Wind Tunnel Graduate Aeronautical Laboratories, California Institute of Technology MS 205-45 Phone: 626.395.4794 Pasadena, CA 91125 Fax: 626.449.2677> > Seriously though, how do you figure that oxygen in the fuel is any different > than oxygen from the air?
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- Posts: 6
- Joined: Thu May 04, 2000 2:56 pm
gas mileage
Is the MTBE that reduce fuel economy and not oxygenation. MTBE takes up
volume and probably have less energy content. MTBE is being phased out
because it poisons the environment it was meant to protect. Corrupt
politicians and fanatic environmentalist is a deadly combination.
Ben
________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com> From: "Jim & Shannon Morehead" >Subject: Re: gas mileage > >That sounds like a crock to me Chris. Har har har. > >Seriously though, how do you figure that oxygen in the fuel is any >different >than oxygen from the air? Oxygen is oxygen when I balance combustion >equations. Do you mean the oxygen in gasoline is bound to some other >substance and must be broken out before entering the combustion process? > >Jim >
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- Posts: 251
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 6:28 pm
gas mileage
My A12 used to get right at 230 miles per tank B4 going to
reserve. Of late though, I get close to 250. Riding style is
the same. I'm thinking that California is starting to phase
out the the MPG robbing MTBE. Any thoughts?
Darrel
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Tue Mar 06, 2001 8:28 pm
gas mileage
I have a 98 with the ids2 quiet series. I'm only getting about 170
miles before I have to switch to reserve and start praying for a
gas station. Does any one know if this is normal?
mitch, san bernardino
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- Posts: 498
- Joined: Fri May 05, 2000 2:51 am
gas mileage
--- In DSN_klr650@y..., bostonmitch@y... wrote:
Mitch, I'm hittin' reserve around 170 also. I've got a 'trapp EAR series with 6 disks. The exhaust alone shouldn't affect your mileage that greatly I don't think. My mileage is also due to the fact that I've got the idle mixture screw set to 3 turns out. Did you change yours or is it stock? dat brooklyn bum> I have a 98 with the ids2 quiet series. I'm only getting about 170 > miles before I have to switch to reserve and start praying for a > gas station. Does any one know if this is normal? > > mitch,
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- Joined: Mon Feb 19, 2001 1:21 am
gas mileage
Wow, 170 to resurve, my A13 (stock) hits resurve at 270 miles, and
thats heavy on the throttle , does the aftermarket exhaust drop it that
much ???
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- Joined: Fri Apr 07, 2000 9:00 pm
gas mileage
In a message dated 3/9/01 8:31:57 AM EST, leedodd@... writes:
>>
Thats about right, My Y2K with 8,000 miles K&N Dyno jet kit 150 main,
coustom made pipe gets about 170 to 190 before going on resurve,
I ran out of gas at 140 miles WFO and pushing a 30 to 40 MPH head wind, I
ended up pushing about 10 miles.
Mike