Hi everyone, my name is Vic, I have a "new to me" 2005 ST1300, with 90,000 miles on the clock at the time of purchase. Bike starts on a dime, runs strong, well-equipped with mods by PO.
This was right in line with the money I wanted to spend, and I am happy with it, but now comes the usual dilemma: did I get a killer deal at $3000 or a bag of issues that will drive me nuts?
After the 1981 GL 1100, 1983 GL 1200, and 1987 GL 1200 Gold Wings, I wanted something in a similar arrangement, younger, lighter, but just as tough, so I have no regrets.
I changed the oil and oil filter, air filter, and final drive oil. Next, I pulled the plugs out; the color was uniform, dark brown/black, no oily deposits. The display showed 27 MPG average.
So I figured something is out of whack when I read a few posts where other riders are getting upwards of 40 MPG, and my 2004 Toyota Rav4 5-speed manual does better than that.
Plugs I pulled out were NGK CR8EHIX-9 Iridium. I replaced them with a new set of the same P#.
After putting on 500 miles in mixed city/freeway rides display showed a consistent 33.7 MPG, which coincided with manual calculation using 5 gallons of 93 octane gas twice.
There was no noticeable difference in the bike's performance that I could detect.
I then pulled out the plugs and replaced them with OEM CR7EH-9; the display now shows 33.6 MPG, closely repeating rides between city and freeway.
Bike warms up to 3 bars and stays there no matter what, so now I am looking at a set of Iridium plugs I pulled out and see that dark coating is already forming on them.
I am not a mechanic, was a machinist for 40 years, have no in-depth knowledge of fuel combustion specifics, but it seems that, despite flawless performance, the bike is running a rich air/fuel mixture.
So the question here is, how much trouble is it to have that checked and adjusted by a qualified mechanic, assuming my guess is correct.
The alternative is just dishing out more at the pump and disregarding the cost and trouble of correcting it.
My rides are mostly around town, with about 1/3 freeway riding. Am I way off target on MPG, or is this acceptable for mostly city riding?
This was right in line with the money I wanted to spend, and I am happy with it, but now comes the usual dilemma: did I get a killer deal at $3000 or a bag of issues that will drive me nuts?
After the 1981 GL 1100, 1983 GL 1200, and 1987 GL 1200 Gold Wings, I wanted something in a similar arrangement, younger, lighter, but just as tough, so I have no regrets.
I changed the oil and oil filter, air filter, and final drive oil. Next, I pulled the plugs out; the color was uniform, dark brown/black, no oily deposits. The display showed 27 MPG average.
So I figured something is out of whack when I read a few posts where other riders are getting upwards of 40 MPG, and my 2004 Toyota Rav4 5-speed manual does better than that.
Plugs I pulled out were NGK CR8EHIX-9 Iridium. I replaced them with a new set of the same P#.
After putting on 500 miles in mixed city/freeway rides display showed a consistent 33.7 MPG, which coincided with manual calculation using 5 gallons of 93 octane gas twice.
There was no noticeable difference in the bike's performance that I could detect.
I then pulled out the plugs and replaced them with OEM CR7EH-9; the display now shows 33.6 MPG, closely repeating rides between city and freeway.
Bike warms up to 3 bars and stays there no matter what, so now I am looking at a set of Iridium plugs I pulled out and see that dark coating is already forming on them.
I am not a mechanic, was a machinist for 40 years, have no in-depth knowledge of fuel combustion specifics, but it seems that, despite flawless performance, the bike is running a rich air/fuel mixture.
So the question here is, how much trouble is it to have that checked and adjusted by a qualified mechanic, assuming my guess is correct.
The alternative is just dishing out more at the pump and disregarding the cost and trouble of correcting it.
My rides are mostly around town, with about 1/3 freeway riding. Am I way off target on MPG, or is this acceptable for mostly city riding?
