The SEARCH feature is very useful & worth learning to use
Yup, this has been discussed many times over & over & over. Believe it or not, but Teddy's NOT a retriever, but he is really good at finding things. But before I show you what he found, he asked me to tell you how to do it for yourself. Something about giving a man a fish & teaching him how to fish. I tell you, that dogs just ate up sometimes :roflblack:
Anyways, if you look toward the top right hand side of every page on the SpyderLovers Forum, you'll see a small white rectangular box with a small magnifying glass icon next to it, that's the forums Search Engine & its very useful. Or, right below that, you can click on the Advanced Search and it will take you to a different page with many more search options.
You can type in something like FILLING FUEL TANK & it will bring up every thread that contains those words, which at this time, there were 84 threads. Then all you have to do is look thru a few of them and most of the time, your answer to your questions will be in front of you for the reading. I love this site!
Now that you know how to search for yourself, I'll copy & paste a few of the aformentioned answers here for you. Hope this helps & ENJOY THE RYDE!!!
Approximately 6.0 gallons is the usable capacity. That leaves room for the necessary head space and the tanks irregularities and opening position. Filling that full is a gamble, though, and could overflow to the emissions canister under certain conditions. On the opposite end of the tank, the low fuel light should come on with about 1.4 gallons remaining
Many, if not most, vehicle gas gauges are not linear. They are merely an approximation of the fuel that is left. At the low fuel light on a Spyder, you should have roughly 50 miles worth of fuel left, give or take. All you can do is learn how your gauge acts, and ride & fill accordingly. I typically just refill based on the mileage on the trip meter, which I reset at every fill.
"BRP states that on empty one should get about 40 miles give or take out of the tank before it is truly empty. This is not a flaw, but built in safety by design." Now, it all makes since.
Also of note, the fuel tank is larger at the top & smaller at the bottom. So, if one of the above posts didn't point this out, I will. It will take a consideralbly longer time for the fuel gauge, Analogue or Digital, to actually start to move once you've filled up. Ours can usually go around 40-50 miles before the first bar (Digital) disappears, but then they start disappearing ever more rapidly as the fuel gets lower in the tank. This is by design, but frustrates many of us, cause its not a linear flow, so each bar on the guage doesn't represent the same amount of fuel used or left in the tank. We live, we learn, and most of all, we :yes:ENJOY THE RYDE:yes: