I know all this I reset my trip and watch mileage My question was WHY is there a fix
I didn't ask anything else, I was not going to blame anyone if I ran out of gas, it was a simple inquiry into a solution or fix nothing more
That post wasn't having a go at you Cirhere, just responding to Ron's post above it.
But there is a lot of discussion about the inherently inaccurate gas gauges here on the Forum, some with diagrams and pics of the odd tank shape that contributes so much to the issue,
AND ALSO that makes it so bloody hard to properly fill your tank! :gaah:
But as rjinaz mentions above, as with many fuel injected engines these days, the fuel pump (& sender) are immersed in the gas tank, and both the pump and the entire fuel injection system use the gas remaining in the tank as both coolant and lubricant for their extremely fine tolerance components, so you
MUST leave enough gas in the tank to keep it all lubricated
AND to sufficiently disperse the heat these high speed/high pressure fine tolerance & often
PLASTIC components run at!! If you don't, you WILL be damaging those very important components! The bits that make them work & keep your engine running as powerfully and as economically as they can are often running so close together that even just a single
molecule of water between them can be too big for them to handle without damage; but luckily that won't cause instant destruction &/or stoppage, or probably more correctly,
UNluckily, cos if you try to compress tiny molecules of water under high pressure when there's enough heat around, they'll instantly flash to
superheated steam that'll
instantly melt any
high quality steel the superheated steam comes into contact with, so you can imagine the damage that'll do to plastic!! And while that damage might not cause instant stoppage cos it's microscopic to start with, every time that tiny bit of damage rotates past its opposite component, usually in a marginally different place to the last time it went round, where it'll create even more damage, damage that only grows and ultimately destroys these very critical parts of your bike! :yikes:
So there's
really no solution that anyone but BRP/Can-Am could apply to this issue, but even if they did, it wouldn't ever be back-dated even if it
was applicable to the earlier models; and
the only safe 'fix' is to
NEVER RELY on your gas gauge, cos it's inherently inaccurate & unreliable due to the shape of the tank and the design of the fuel pump & sender! :gaah:
Bugga! There's
ANOTHER 'never'!! :banghead:
