Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Gas Mileage....?
Collapse
X
-
Hornswaggle
Just buzzing around town on my 450 I'll average around 55+mpg. I got 63mpg last Saturday cruising along the Mississippi River between Wabasha and Red Wing in SE MN checking out the sail boats and bald eagles Definately a recommended destination if you are ever in this neck of the woods. And don't forget the twisties on Hwy 60 between Wabasha and Zumbro Falls, a lot of fun.Last edited by Guest; 09-14-2010, 10:46 AM.
-
MikeJ
Originally posted by noobie View PostBest mileage ever attained on a bike of mine was 66.44 mpg on my '83 Nighthawk 650 which had only 10,000 miles on the clock back then.
IMO personal riding style, weight, and riding conditions have a lot more to do with actually experienced gas mileage than do minor design variations between bikes. I get anywhere between 35 mpg and 50 mpg on all my bikes, from the big fours down to the 250 twin, depending on conditions. I suppose I could maybe get 65-70 mpg out of the Ninjette (even carrying my 6'3", 280 lb. bod) if I kept it to a steady throttle setting at 55 mph on a flat, smooth road, but what fun is that?
That said, my understanding is that internal-combustion engines are most efficient (i.e. they make the best use of their available fuel being turned into usable energy, which is another way of saying they get better mileage out of a tank of gas) when they are running at or near wide-open throttle. So a little 50cc tiddler running WOT at 45 mph can get well over 100 mpg while a bigger bike, that is barely putting along above idle at that speed, will get much worse mileage. That's also the reason the big thumpers and pushrod twins typically get better gas mileage at ordinary highway speeds than a high-revving four - on the interstate at 75 mph they are running much closer to their designed max engine speed and WOT than a high-revving multi like our GS's would be.
That was mostly at 65 mph on our Interstate, 130 miles.
Only one owner before, when bought it it only had 8900 miles and still only the 2nd set of tires ... front was 16 years old and rear was 19 years old (that was 2 years ago).
Comment
-
noobie
Originally posted by MikeJ View PostWhoa. Would that be imperial gallons, then? Or was that downhill, with a tailwind?
It was uphill, downhill, facewind, tailwind, sidewind,... Everything imaginable. Plus some of it was also on regular roads, not just interstate (it gets too boring).
Originally posted by MikeJ View PostThat said, my understanding is that internal-combustion engines are most efficient (i.e. they make the best use of their available fuel being turned into usable energy, which is another way of saying they get better mileage out of a tank of gas) when they are running at or near wide-open throttle.
Originally posted by MikeJ View PostHope you replaced them, even if they had almost all their tread left. Tires that old have hardened and lost their grip, not good for anything but sitting on a museum pedestal, or puttering along at 3 mph in a parade.
Comment
-
Originally posted by MikeJ View Post
That said, my understanding is that internal-combustion engines are most efficient (i.e. they make the best use of their available fuel being turned into usable energy, which is another way of saying they get better mileage out of a tank of gas) when they are running at or near wide-open throttle. So a little 50cc tiddler running WOT at 45 mph can get well over 100 mpg while a bigger bike, that is barely putting along above idle at that speed, will get much worse mileage. That's also the reason the big thumpers and pushrod twins typically get better gas mileage at ordinary highway speeds than a high-revving four - on the interstate at 75 mph they are running much closer to their designed max engine speed and WOT than a high-revving multi like our GS's would be.'82 GS1100E
Comment
-
pwrdbyoreos
Did we ever find the answer to this? I have wondered the same thing. I have a 1000 with pods, stage three, wide open kerker 4-1 and I can get around 125 miles on 4 gallons.
Comment
-
crazypaint
wow thats what i get in town when im running mine hard i got a 1100 16v with all the same stuff but my pipe is a V&H with a baffle
Comment
-
Originally posted by Steve View PostMy only trip out with "Junior", my 850G"K", I got 39.4 cruising on the freeway at about 70 mph on the way to Red River Rally. On the way home, we took the 2-lanes at a slower pace, got about 43 mpg.
We were stopping before the tank was empty, due to limited range on some of the other bikes, but here are the mileage figures for successive tanks:
40.20
42.35
40.74
40.14
43.95
44.12
46.62
40.30
40.84
Remarkable consistency, if nothing else.
My wife's bike joined Simon's on the trailer for the trip home, just so she could sit in the van and visit.
Mileage figures for her bike:
43.62
44.96
49.49
46.00
54.34
then the trailer ride.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
Comment
-
Skateguy50
My only motivation for knowing mileage is to not run out of gas, my gauge shows empty at 2 gallons and the reserve setting also goes dry at 2 gallons. With a 3 gallon tank I cant run with just the two and would rather leave it set to ON than fiddle with it while slowing to a stop 3 lanes over on the highway.
Typically I would run for 100 miles and then look for gas, well my worst mileage in a while got me run out at 110 miles... it was a VERY windy day and I was running it pretty fast, but again the miles is the only thing that really shows my my gas level unless I adjust the gauge to read lower somehow.
My solution was to get a small 1 gallon tank and put that in my saddlebag with the toolkit. One side is now the gas can, quart of oil, and tool bag.
Oh and I got a solid 50 mpg on a group ride last weekend doing 55 on back roads, so it does better if Im not doing 80 on the highway into the wind.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Skateguy50 View PostOh and I got a solid 50 mpg on a group ride last weekend doing 55 on back roads, so it does better if Im not doing 80 on the highway into the wind.
Originally posted by Steve View PostMy wife's 850 struggled to keep up with a large group on the freeway, doing about 75 into a 15 mph headwind. Got about 29 mpg for two consecutive tanks. Later on that same trip, there were several consecutive tanks in the 52-56 mpg range, with a high of 59.
(Actually, it kept up just fine, it just sucked a LOT of gas doing it.)sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
Comment
Comment