Fuel Reserve - is it really a reserve?

But, since the fuel in the lower tank cools the fuel pump, and heat shortens its life, you might consider filling up at two bars.
Short story that I hope you all can appreciate. One tragic, the other a bit humorous.

Some technicians at Grand Forks AFB were troubleshooting a fuel pump problem. The circuit breaker for the fuel pump (located in the wing and also submerged in fuel like the ST, kept popping. So they kept pushing it in. Eventually it got hot enough to blow the wing off. My squadron at Griffiss AFB in NY got involved by sending the only remaining G model wing to replace it from a electronics test airplane located on a remote hilltop in Upstate New York. We did ECM testing on airplanes on these remote hilltops and for the B-52, we had a 50 ton crane to pick it up and flip it upside down depending on the testing they were doing.

The more humorous story is how the early VW Beetles didn't have a fuel gauge. You were to flip the lever on the floor when you started getting low on gas to get the reserve fuel. Unfortunately, many owners forgot to flip the lever back after refueling and when their Beetle ran out of gas...there was no reserve left.

I find my XR to be quite incessant in getting more gas when it runs low. The dash will tell you how many miles you have left. I've never been brave enough to run it to the end yet. When it gets down to two bars on the gauge, an orange warning notice appears saying I'm running out of fuel...go find a gas station immediately. From that point on, I get to see both a readout on miles left and how many bars I have left. Maybe that's why you don't see many BMW's on the side of the road??? I usually have about 42 miles left when the warning comes on.

Chris
 
When the last bar starts flashing on the ST1300 fuel gauge there are, excluding minor variances between ST1300's, 5 liters, 1.32 US gallons, 1.10 Imperial gallons, of fuel remaining in the lower tank.
 
When I rode bikes with reserve petcocks, I developed the habit of leaving on reserve for a few miles, in case I got some water. I'd rather find out when I have a full tank than next time I set it to reserve.
 
The heat transfer from the pump switches from convection between the pump hardware and the liquid fuel to air.
I might be reading this wrong as it's been know to happen. But wouldn't that be more like:

The heat transfer from the pump switches from conduction between the pump hardware and the liquid fuel to convection between the pump hardware and air.
 
The fuel acts as a thermal ballast. It's heat bearing capacity is large compared to the air which displaces the volume of the lower tank as the fuel is consumed.

The heat transfer from the pump switches from convection between the pump hardware and the liquid fuel to air. This transfer is much more effective for liquid (fuel) than gas (air).
I'm following the science here, but not sure I follow the logic. If I have a pot of boiling water and a metal object suspended in the pot, the pot is 212* the water is 212* the object has to be 212*. The air outside the pot is less than 212*. I love stretching my brain.
 
Fuel reserve?
Anybody remember ( I know you all do ) reaching frantically under your left leg for the reserve tank switch whilst riding amongst traffic. The good old days when a RD400 was considered a powerful bike.
Upt'North.
only to find that you were already on reserve because you forgot to swithch it back the last time you switched it on reserve
 
Motors generate heat --including electric motors. So what if the electric motor in the fuel pump would normally get to a temperature much hotter than the ambient temperature of the substances around it, unless that substance is an excellent themo-conductor which draws that excess temperature away, into itself, which liquids tend to do well, but air does not do so well?
 
The more humorous story is how the early VW Beetles didn't have a fuel gauge. You were to flip the lever on the floor when you started getting low on gas to get the reserve fuel. Unfortunately, many owners forgot to flip the lever back after refueling and when their Beetle ran out of gas...there was no reserve left.
Not just Beetles. I've done that at least once on my old 400cc Yammy. At least it was easy to waddle to the gas station. If my ST ever quits, I'm leaving it. I love it but not worth a hernia over.
 
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