For starters:
I began my test with a battery voltage of exactly 12.40V without load. Right on. I charged it up a few days earlier with my standard wall plug-in battery charger. I used my BC 1200 bike computer to clock my ride time.
On the ride:
I rode with typical duty cycle. I started out with a half mile on residential streets, then 6 or 7 miles on the highway. The rest was all city driving. I checked my voltage at about 10 minutes. It had fallen from 12.4V to 12.2V (no load).
Near the end:
I ran fine until about the 35 minute mark, where I had trouble accelerating in 5th gear. I was running down by a couple cylinders at that point, but only when I opened the throttle up. I was back at my home at that point, and I checked the no load voltage: 11.8V. The starter groaned and complained but it started and ran, so I ventured out again. I only made it a few more miles. At the 40 minute mark I was running weakly on two cylinders I think, with an open throttle. I'm not that good at hearing a misfiring cylinder, so maybe I was always misfiring, but the gas expansion at idle was too subtle for me to hear. Anyway, I limped home, being down to one cylinder at the end and put it up for the night. Final no load voltage: 11.6V. With load: 11.0. Total ride time, including limping home: 44 minutes. Total distance: 25 miles.
I know I'm low on gas, but I don't think I hit the reserve during my test. I think it would fall off and die, rather than limp on one cylinder, if I were
out of gas. EDIT: Well, it turns out that I was out of gas. Poopyhead. Fortunately, that means that I could have kept going. Although my starter was so weak that I was probably right to stop then.
In case you were curious,
Michael
Comment