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Dunno.
Benefits of living at high altitude maybe? I run 85 in both bikes and both vehicles. Not problems. Occaisionally running higher grade in the SUV.
Downside of living at high alt, I think our prices for 85 are akin to what others pay for 87. Here the only offerings at the petrol station are 85/87/90. 92 is not an option except for 1 station in town that also sells leaded gas still.....
Yep, it's an elevation thing. 85 runs fine, unless you ride down in the flatland. But that lowland riding is way too boring to even contemplate, it's just not going to happen.
85 is fine.
Here are a couple of websites that can help you track down gas stations that might still have non-oxygenated gas yet.
http://www.buyrealgas.com/ http://pure-gas.org/
I run what the manual says too, usually in the middle. Though I have noticed that at higher altitudes the bike seems to want a higher octane? I'm at 3,800/4,000ft now and do alot of my riding at 6,000 to 8,000ft+ in my area. With my idle set at about 1100 rpm, it will barely idle at the higher elevations, so I bumped it up to around 1400.
Lol, haven't heard the term 3/4 race cam in ages, that is a misnomer you valve duration and lift lol.[/QUOTE]
I realize that, but that's what it was called then, it was an Abarth racing cam, but without as high of lift as what was termed full race then. I have no idea what the duration and lift were now, that was in '73.
Thanks for the links. Good stuff. But if the EPA sets the rules, how do they get away with it ? Not that I'm complaining.![]()
Wow, somebody else that has been shoe-horned into an 850 Spyder. :clap: :clap:I ran high octane, leaded fuel in my '70 Fiat 850 Spider
Avoiding ethanol is probably OK, but I'm not sure that using 94 octane gas is the way to do it.I use Chevron 94 for my bike. But my motivation is primarily to avoid ethanol.
As I just mentioned above, you won't get any more power by simply putting higher-octane fuel in the tank, even if you do advance the timing so it can all be burned by the proper time.I run 89 in the summer, 87 in the winter. If I wanted to try to squeeze a couple extra HP out of it, I could run 91 and advance the timing a little but meh. I'm not really all that into speedin' around on my little 550.
You don't need as much octane up here, as the air is less dense. Wide open throttle lets in less air than at sea level, so the tendency to detonate is lessened. 85 is enough for these low compression engines.
Another way to look at it, if you have 20% less dense air, it is exactly the same as having 20% lower compression ratio, so lower octane fuel is just fine.
It also helps that it's not likely to be 110 degrees F at 10,000 feet.
The flip side of this is we get less power, all normally aspirated engines make noticeably less power up here than they do at sea level.
The higher you go, the less power the engine can make.
A 1000 cc bike at 10,000 ft goes about like a 650 at sea level, without the high RPM kick.
Back in the late '60s and throughout most of the '70s you could buy 100 octane at any station. It's what was called Ethyl.I look at it this way.....30 years ago when my bike was produced there was none of this high octain gas was there ? So why use it today, I put in the cheap stuff, now mind you I have not filled up the tank in a long time, but once I do, it will be the low octain stuff.....
I ahve been known to be wrong in the past, and this might be one of those times, but I think I will be safe, and at $1.50 a litre for the good stuff, well NO Thanks....my SUV get's enough of that already
Avoiding ethanol is probably OK, but I'm not sure that using 94 octane gas is the way to do it.
Higher-octane gas has fewer BTUs per gallon and burns slower, so you will not get any more power by simply putting it in your tank..
You don't need as much octane up here, as the air is less dense. Wide open throttle lets in less air than at sea level, so the tendency to detonate is lessened. 85 is enough for these low compression engines.
Another way to look at it, if you have 20% less dense air, it is exactly the same as having 20% lower compression ratio, so lower octane fuel is just fine.
It also helps that it's not likely to be 110 degrees F at 10,000 feet.
The flip side of this is we get less power, all normally aspirated engines make noticeably less power up here than they do at sea level.
The higher you go, the less power the engine can make.
A 1000 cc bike at 10,000 ft goes about like a 650 at sea level, without the high RPM kick.
spchips, you may wish to reconsider your terminology. Ethanol 87 is blend of up to 87% ethanol. Around here we use Ethanol 10 in octane ratings of 87, 89, 91, 92 and 93.