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Sponsor says run c12 or a 50/50 blend of c12/pump gas.
Ecu is stock, motor stock, intake stock, exhaust is a slip on, no power commander.
My gut says pump gas based on my highly calibrated butt dyno through the years.
What do you think?
Central Mass Powersports #123
1000rr, zx10r, rmz450, RE classic, r6, S4Rs, xr123, sv650(2), cr250 and a box truck that leaks power steering fluid.
no power comander... stock motor etc pfft just run the 93 at the track pumps
https://www.facebook.com/LRRSBT1R #54 EX 2007 SV650 "Work hard. Play harder. Die broke and happy!" Boston Tier 1 Racing Pirelli Tires Woodcraft-CFM Armorbodies Penguin Racing School Vortex Shorai Batteries DP Brakes Riders Discount SIDI Leatt
That's the thing though, why?
Central Mass Powersports #123
1000rr, zx10r, rmz450, RE classic, r6, S4Rs, xr123, sv650(2), cr250 and a box truck that leaks power steering fluid.
cant mix fuels, so 50/50 of C12 isnt legal at NHMS.
C12 is designed for the old 2-stroke bikes. dont use it.
stock motor, use the 93 pump at NHMS.
thinned head gasket, with full exhaust and high flow air filter....run Sunoco GT 260
4 stroke motard uses c12 - are we going down the rabbit hole with this topic?
Central Mass Powersports #123
1000rr, zx10r, rmz450, RE classic, r6, S4Rs, xr123, sv650(2), cr250 and a box truck that leaks power steering fluid.
To get any gain out of a higher octane fuel you need to do one or more of the following:
- Raise compression to take advantage of increased knock resistance
- Advance ignition timing to account for higher octane's typically slower burn rate
- Increase VE via porting/cam timing/etc or boost (turbo/supercharging) to raise combustion pressures
- Adjust fueling to match
To get any gain out of an oxygenated fuel, you need to adjust fueling to match otherwise you'll be running way lean and loose power.
You haven't done any of those, or anything to improve the bike's breathing overall significantly. Your bike will make the most power on the lowest octane pump gas it'll run on without knocking. If racing with LRRS that means pump 93 from the track. Anything else is pissing money and HP away.
Last edited by Kurlon; 07-23-14 at 09:08 AM.
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Central Mass Powersports #123
1000rr, zx10r, rmz450, RE classic, r6, S4Rs, xr123, sv650(2), cr250 and a box truck that leaks power steering fluid.
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Central Mass Powersports #123
1000rr, zx10r, rmz450, RE classic, r6, S4Rs, xr123, sv650(2), cr250 and a box truck that leaks power steering fluid.
This thread sucks.
-Christian LRRS/CCS HasBeen ECK Racing
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Kurlon is spot on. If the bike isn't tuned at all, it's likely set up from the factory to run optimally on 91 (not 93) in most cases. So if there are any race-legal 91 octane options, that's what you should run. If not then do the 93 at the track I guess.
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