The best way I have found to be consistent is to insert the nozzle as little as possible, then fill slowly (at least at the end). Fill until the gas just starts to spit back through the slots in the "no-lead" ring. The trick is really to get fairly uniform fills...that makes the fuel mileage calculations more accurate. An average over several tankfulls is still the best, however. Just keep track for a while, and add all the gallons and divide into the entire mileage for that period.I have trouble figuring the mileage as the last gallon is slow going in and I'm never really sure when it's full as I usually give up trickling it in at some point.
What you have said here may be the key to your poor mileage. First, the Spyder SE shouldn't even shift at 3,000 rpm. I'm sure you may have noticed some hesitation and refusal to shift. The Spyder centrifugal clutch does not begin to engage until 2,000 +/- 200 rpm, and is not fully engaged until 3,200 +/- 200 rpm. It will typically drop about 1,000 rpm between gears. If you shift at 3,000 rpm, it will end up running at around 2,000 rpm, with the centrifugal clutch slipping badly. You need to shift above 4,200-4,400 rpm to assure no clutch slippage. As was said, clutch slippage kills mileage and will eventually kill the clutch.
The Spyder RT will run on 87 octane, but 91 or better is recommended. The higher octane fuel will make the Spyder perform better, which may actually improve your mileage. Higher octane fuels get poorer mileage than lower octane fuels, in themselves, though. If you ride 12,000 miles a year, and get 25 miles to a gallon, the premium fuel will only cost you $100 more a year.
Bottom line...pick up the rpm a bit and see if your fuel mileage improves. Your performance certainly will. You are going to discover a whole different machine once you hit 5,000 rpm!
At 35-45 I am usually in 2nd or 3rd gear, depending on the speed and terrain. Your approach may vary. 5th gear is way too high for those speeds, however.Thanks! I will definately try the rpms higher before shifting. When you are driving around town at 35-45 mph do you shift all the way up or leave it in 3rd or 4th gear?
Either, but I don't ride Nancy's GS much since I got my own toy.Scotty,
Is that on the RT? :shocked:
Well I'm definitely in "Geezer" mode... I shift into 3rd at about 24mph, 4th at about 30 and 5th at an alarming 38mph...pps:
The bottom line is that with an SE5, you should be above 3,200-3,500 rpm when cruising down the road, to prevent damage to the clutch assembly. The Spyder's performance is miserable there, and the torque is a fraction of what it is blessed with, but if it makes you happy, go for it. Just don't go lower! That means you should not upshift until 4,200-4,500 rpm...minimum.Sounds about like me. The owner's manuel says nothing about this, as to what gears are best or what rpm's are best. I think of the engine like the heart; unless at need, the lower rpms place less demand and therefore should get better gas mileage. But I am still new at this and ready for good advice!