It sounds to me that the bike is running pretty well. I don't have any reason to doubt your carb guy . You'd hope he'd notice irregularities from his own experience with the bikes. I've never seen huge results from any tweaking of mixture screws beyond the hope of a really smooth and clean idle. But then, I'm not so much at idle- a maximum of 6 stoplights in town and they're never all red... I've mentioned floatlevels and a stuck choke/enricher soo, I'll harp a little more on the calculation? 
(A-B)/G=mpg
where A= latest odometer at fill-up
B=previous odometer at previous fill-up
G = latest gals to fillup...
(A-B) is therefore the miles travelled between fillups. Divide this by G (gas replaced to bring back to baseline= gas used per the miles it took the bike) and you get the correct result. I use the bottom of the filler neck in the tank and try to get very close to this each time.
PARTIAL fillups to no known "baseline" will give the wrong result*
...As an aside, this really is telling you about the previous fillup per quality of gasoline (I note the brand and type of gas) and terrain (mountains, or city, or prairie highway ) These will likely show up as different "averages".
Even periods where gasoline evaporates or leaks can show up in the results.
It might be convenient to add columns in your spreadsheet to note oil changes and maintenance notes too- it's handy if you're not doing it elsewhere.
* another method is an empty tank, pour in a the same quantity of gas each time and ride the bike until it stops-not practical or safe though.
" Yes, mpg...Of course, and that should work fine. Need note however to confirm that the usual technique requires you to fill the tank each time... Then, with this baseline( a full tank) you can quickly check per"As far as math - are y'all talking about the mpg math..I just put in how much I bought and my current mileage.
(A-B)/G=mpg
where A= latest odometer at fill-up
B=previous odometer at previous fill-up
G = latest gals to fillup...
(A-B) is therefore the miles travelled between fillups. Divide this by G (gas replaced to bring back to baseline= gas used per the miles it took the bike) and you get the correct result. I use the bottom of the filler neck in the tank and try to get very close to this each time.
PARTIAL fillups to no known "baseline" will give the wrong result*
...As an aside, this really is telling you about the previous fillup per quality of gasoline (I note the brand and type of gas) and terrain (mountains, or city, or prairie highway ) These will likely show up as different "averages".
Even periods where gasoline evaporates or leaks can show up in the results.
It might be convenient to add columns in your spreadsheet to note oil changes and maintenance notes too- it's handy if you're not doing it elsewhere.
* another method is an empty tank, pour in a the same quantity of gas each time and ride the bike until it stops-not practical or safe though.
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