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I actually fill up 2 gals max and usually always 1. Exceptions are if I'm doing a long commute. I do the same with my car (not same gallons but never full) not for your technical mpg reason
This makes no sense to me. From an emergency preparedness level you're actually never supposed to have less than a half tank at any time, and from a maintenance level, you're begging to have rust start to form in the tank (assuming your car has a steel tank).
 
This makes no sense to me. From an emergency preparedness level you're actually never supposed to have less than a half tank at any time, and from a maintenance level, you're begging to have rust start to form in the tank (assuming your car has a steel tank).
Plastic, and I'm never more than 4 blocks from a gas station. Living in a city, I can never not find or not be able to obtain.
 
Discussion starter · #45 · (Edited)
Gotta wrap this thread up now, too! So, my measurements, and, my technique is accurate @ I'm still averaging 48.5 miles per gallon. My bestest: 52.3, my worstest: 45.6 MPG, and I suspect that it will rise to 50 MPG over the rest of summer, whether I try to do things or not. Very happy with 48.5 and will ot be surprised to see 50 MPG as my baseline within a month.

Good news: I received my Arai Vector II today, in Diamond Grey, which is actually not very close to matte graphite- but, who cares! It looks awesome, it fits awesome, and, other than a few oddball whistles that I get out of it- it's very comfortable & quiet to boot! I figure that it alone is good for +2 HP, and, at least 3MPG due to reduced aerodynamic drag from the HJC SY-MAX-III, which looks like a cinder block when compared side by side. Together with the new, lightweight, summer leather jacket, I could average 60 MPG, and, have occasional fills in the mid 70 MPG range! But, was this very basic jacket has very few seams, only (2) side pockets & virtually nothing else to interrupt airflow, and, it's fitted to boot. Between the jacket & helmet, 110 MPH is really quiet- a nice surprise & greatly appreciated by me, so, I can focus on the road and where police might be hiding.

I'm really not sure when the engine will be really bedded in completely, but, I'm addicted to the sound of it at any RPM when I load the throttle up- it's an adreneline shot. But, banging the throttle at anything over 6,000 RPM requires commitment. I love it, and, the rush + the quickshifter and I'm still not 100% sure if I can see far enough ahead to stay @ WOT into 6th- most of the time. But, I can't stop doing it either? Needless to say, I have almost recieved impressions of Chevrolet pressed into my forehead more than once. But, this is the biggest problem I've experienced with the bike so far, everything else has been outstanding!

Update: My Low Fuel Warning Light went on yesterday @ 152.6 miles, while driving on a level road at steady speed. A gas station was a mere 200 yards ahead, so, I filled it up to find out how much fuel is left in the tank when the light comes on! I was able to get 3.275 gallons into my tank, which brought the level up to the 'high side' lip just being covered (the level I always fill too). If the tank truly holds 4.59659 gallons (17.4 liters), the light went on with 1.32159 gallons from empty, or, almost EXACTLY 5 liters (5.00276 liters). Although the manual states that the light comes on @ 0.92 gallons (3.5 liters), the closeness to 5 liters is pretty amazing, and, probably not coincidental. Based on my average fuel economy, I could have ridden an additional 65 miles- that's almost too much warning.
 
Discussion starter · #46 ·
OK- this thread is wrapped, but, here is an update for this 2014 StripleR. Totoal of 1,824 miles logged on the engine. Delivered 7/1/14.

Low Fuel Warning Light comes on @ 160.6 miles logged (3x average)
Tank takes: 3.30 Gallons on average, leaving 1.3 Gallons as reserve.
Average MPG is rising, currently 49.4 lifetime, 50 MPG last 10 fills.

Riding it like it's rented, mostly- unless I'm on the highway (30%), when I draft a little to reduce buffetting mostly, but, not too close cuz - it just isn't worth it! 40% is on high speed secondary roads, rural routes with speed limits of 45-55, occasional lights- good MPG roads if you catch the lights- of course. 30% on back road twisties, revs always over 6,000, using blue lights to quick shift as needed...Had oil changed @ 953 miles, still very clean, no burning, leaking, or, drop in level since change? (needed 3/4 of a quart @ 700 miles...) Adjusted tires pressures @ 1,500 miles- up to 34F/42R per Owner's Manual & reading several threads. It was much lower 28F/34R prior to cold reset. Ride is not harsh, but, balance in curves is more noticeable? OEM Corsa Rossa's still look good, no leveling yet and pretty low wear...

Still think this is surprising, as most owners get 45 or less, commuting or not, regardless of year, miles on engine, state of tune...
 
So I broke 40mpg on my bike yesterday; all 6th 75-100 miles. I was probably closer to 45 during 75-80.

My street mpgs is severely different; even mixed dont get much.
 
For most of us, motorcycles are toys. So instead of MPG, I always look at SPM. Besides..once the tank is empty ya gotta put fuel in it anyway. Unless your getting horribly bad mileage and it's running bad..SPM is the only way to gauge.
 
Discussion starter · #51 ·
Agreed- and, I've never had such a high SPM, ever! Love this thing, words don't cover it! I am addicted to the howl at WOT over 6,000 RPM's, every nerve jangling, tunnel vision sets in. My wife said "pretty road"... I never saw anything but the curves?
 
lets calculate how many SPM when there's nothing in your wallet.
 
During *normal cruising, my 2013 STR flips the low fuel warning at about 150-160 miles, and I've gotten just over 200 miles to a tank (did not run out of gas, but might not have made it another 50 feet hehe). When I romp on it** I'm seeing the low fuel light a good 30-40 miles sooner (at about 120-130 miles). I'm on my second set of tires (went with Angel GTs now, not seeing much of a difference in fuel economy yet but it's too early to tell really).

*When I cruise about leisurely, I make an effort to get up into 6th as fast as possible (short shifting through the RPM band) to (A) keep the noise down in residential neighborhoods (B) keep the buzziness to a minimum on the highway and (C) attempt to increase fuel economy.

**When I romp on it through the fun roads, I take the tach almost up to redline just to where power starts to level off (or at least get as close as I can given my level of skill) are rarely get beyond 4th gear.


I used hard break-in procedure (similar to MotoMan's but not specifically where I found it) as I've always done on my bikes.

:shrug:
 
Discussion starter · #55 ·
Empty wallet? Been there, done that- probably do it again, too! But, tank full of gas and an empty wallet- still lots to be grateful for. Plenty of SPM left in that tank, and, if used sparingly- could last for days, or, until wallet isn't so empty!

However, I can see how this bike can suck the cash out of accounts- regardless of distance. I miss mine already (a mere 2 days) so, I'm gonna go pick it up in an hour! Installed TPMS sensors (Had a tire go down on the highway-scared the snot outta me), shorty levers & 17 tooth front sprocket. Dealer set sag on bike (now that there are 2,000 miles on it). Time to adjust suspension for rider weight & reference with gear on...

But, I did an all day ride yesterday: sun, rain, hail, wind storm, 5,000 foot elevation change- on my other bike. Glad I rode a cruiser instead of the StripleR because today, I can move! The StripleR feels closer to a sport, or supersport position (OK, sport) than my cruiser does, and, at 50 it creates hip cramps, lower back aches, occasional numbing in my hands. Yes, I use my core muscles, but, I think cuz I'm old, I still run into these things. I have given time to develop the right muscles, and, haved stayed with it- riding enough to re-inforce that development, but, I think I would have been much more exhausted today (position,no windshield, fly screen, visor).

But, it is so much more refined than my cruiser, so much smoother in every regard- it was a tough call.
 
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If your wallet is empty and your sitting on a 10,000$ bike with a full set of gear you need to figure out where your priorities lie.
It was an exaggeration. If gas isn't in your budget then you clearly aren't on the same page as most people. Travel costs money.
 
I fully agree. For me it's just a toy. I want it to go fast when I twist the right side. I'm not going to spend three weeks figuring out if I get 52.4MPG with one helmet vs 56.74MPG with a different helmet and smaller key ring.
 
I fully agree. For me it's just a toy. I want it to go fast when I twist the right side. I'm not going to spend three weeks figuring out if I get 52.4MPG with one helmet vs 56.74MPG with a different helmet and smaller key ring.
Niether would I. I use my bike as fun moreso anything else. I've given up on aiming for high mpgs for anything I own. My car gets 15 and previous bikes and present gets 25-30. I need gas. I buy gas. Gas company wins.
 
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