spacetiger
New member
Thanks for the reply. Here's some more info:
The pipes are wrapped, I had Lou at Pirate Powersports do it so it would get done right. He put heat shielding all inside it too, and also did my first full service so I know he checked for leaks and bad hoses. I use 91 octane fuel, but I'm in California and I know everything has ethanol in it. I do often get a strong gas smell from the bike, at odd times and without any pattern to pinpoint why. Also, I just walked out to the garage and wiped the insides of the exhausts with a clean paper towel, and there is almost no soot (much to my surprise).
:banghead:
okay, let say for now, the tail pipe wipe is telling us you are not dumping excess fuel into the engine. I don't know what A/F ratio we run stock, but lets just say it averages out at 14:1 (I'd guess we actually run at a lower ratio, say 13:1 on the avg). For you to be running 50% under the average mpg (~ 30 mpg), your F/A ratio would be running under 10:1 (maybe close to 9:1). I would think constant running at that level would soot up your pipe for sure.
So, where is the gas going? Are you able to pull the left side panel off and run the bike a few days with it off? This allows you easy access to the gas tank via the exhaust pipe side. I was curious what is the ride duration to and from work (curious how long it takes to run down ~6 gals)? Is it possible to ride to work and feel the gas tank after getting there? I think you can get these stick on temp gauges used to take your temperature. You pop them on the forehead and watch where the temp tops out. These or an IR temp gun could be used to see how hot your gas tank is getting on these rides if you don't want to use your hands. If you do do this, make sure all the other panels are held on with their fasteners so nothing goes flying off. With the panels off, it might make it easier to you to pin point the source of the gas smell.
Have you made any mods to the bike; exhaust, intake, ignition...?
Jerry
Edit: Watch this youtube experiment on the boiling temp of gasoline - then use your imagination on what is happening inside you gas tank with the exhaust pipe next to it. There is a comment posted and have heard this before: "The higher the octane level of the gasoline, the lower the boiling temperature the gasoline will have. The highest octane level gasoline boils at 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The lowest octane gasoline boils at around 400 degrees Fahrenheit"/ So, you say you run 91 octane and I see you live in 29 Palms (hot)... perhaps you have a unique situation of a lot of heat all the time, perhaps a lot on long commuting rides and run higher octane gas... Maybe you are just boiling it off? Try running a few tanks of 87 and see what you can do to drop the temp of the gas tank 10% (assuming you can measure the temp it runs at) :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7AkcjnCTVU
Last edited: