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Posted: Mon Jul 14, 2008 3:08 pm
by JC Viper
Many bike magazines list their fuel mileage in their in depth reviews of bikes. The British bike mags are really good at listing fuel mileage especially on different types of roads.
Also reviewers tend to ride the bike much harder than most people.
Posted: Mon Jul 14, 2008 3:50 pm
by blues2cruise
ofblong wrote:blues2cruise wrote:Fuel economy is also important to me....as is insurance cost.
The magazine just wants to sell magazines...so often it's all about the glamour.....
You can probably find the info you need on the net....in fact...click on the link in the post above.
looking at the fuel guide my bike isnt listed yet I gave my info on that thread.
wonder if its because I was the only one with that type of bike????
Either way I have a honda shadow deluxe vlx 1996 and get 55mpg continuously on city/county roads and I drive 60mph.
That is decent mileage.
Posted: Tue Jul 15, 2008 2:12 am
by ofblong
blues2cruise wrote:ofblong wrote:blues2cruise wrote:Fuel economy is also important to me....as is insurance cost.
The magazine just wants to sell magazines...so often it's all about the glamour.....
You can probably find the info you need on the net....in fact...click on the link in the post above.
looking at the fuel guide my bike isnt listed yet I gave my info on that thread.
wonder if its because I was the only one with that type of bike????
Either way I have a honda shadow deluxe vlx 1996 and get 55mpg continuously on city/county roads and I drive 60mph.
That is decent mileage.
not as good as a rebel but..... I am not going to complain

.
Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 8:55 am
by Dragon on Wheels
I would like fuel mileage in reviews. I don't mind if they keep the statistics they have now too.
Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 1:02 am
by Nibblet99
matthew5656 wrote:Bicycle: Better exercise, with an ability to laugh and poke fun at the majority spending a lot of their paycheck on black gold. MPG= Best
As you don't generally drink Petrolium Spirits (ok "Gasoline") shouldn't that be listed in Miles Per Pie, not Miles Per Gallon?
Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 8:59 am
by waizen
My '06 Kawasaki 900 Classic has been getting a consistent 54-55 mpg with a mixture of local and highway speeds. Two weeks ago, I actually got 58 mpg, however, that was the only time I filled up at a different pump. Usually I fill up at the same pump to get consistent reports.
BTW: most cruiser mags will publish mpg. Sportbike mags don't list them as much, I find.
Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 4:05 am
by e1_zx-9r
This would be a good post on a magazine forum.
One of my main considerations last Aug (2008) was MPG. I like a fun bike, but it looses it's appeal if it strands or limits my riding due to poor range. I want a bike I can ride hard and the MPG goes down to 42 rather than going down to 30. The mags listed my ZX-9r as getting 38-42 MPG, but I found many personal blogs showing the actual to be roughly 50. So even when the mags do post MPG, it's posted after they 1/4 mile it a dozen times, top speed the sucker, and race it around the track. Useless!!
Many of the posts here reflect the thinking of today's riders, F--- MPG. These same guys are the ones I'm having to nurse around to the next gas station, because they forgot to realize that most rides to canyonland require 50-100 miles of boring highway. And when they get to canyonland, the nearest gas station was 30 miles back and now they can't play because they're on fumes. Those kinds of bikes should be left at the track.
For us real-world riders, we want comfort, agility, and a bike we can actually go somewhere with. And when most riders buy a track bike or a drag strip bike for the street, mfgrs build bikes that do just that.
Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 9:06 am
by Nalian
I've had quite a range on my bike ('07 kawi 650r) depending on the riding I'm doing. The best I've seen was 62mpg while on a highway trip. Most of the time I was going between 65-85 mph but it was pretty consistent in 6th gear and not much throttle fluctuation. The worst I've seen is when my commute was all in town no more than 4 miles (but it still took 20 minutes..). I got around 48ish mpg.
Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 3:01 pm
by RhadamYgg
The B-King is actually ok in terms of mpg. Most times I get 45 mpg as a commuter. A few 48's and once a 52 (entirely highway ride).
I think, with a bit of Honda-style VFR upcoming cylinder management technology - even a beast like my B-king would get 50's to 60's.
RhadamYgg
Posted: Sun Sep 13, 2009 4:29 pm
by JC Viper
RhadamYgg wrote:The B-King is actually ok in terms of mpg. Most times I get 45 mpg as a commuter. A few 48's and once a 52 (entirely highway ride).
I think, with a bit of Honda-style VFR upcoming cylinder management technology - even a beast like my B-king would get 50's to 60's.
RhadamYgg
Yeah, the new VFR is supposed to be a long distance touring bike with near 200MPH speed.
The new issue of Motorcyclist has a picture of it being ridden and it looks kinda funky. I like the look of the current VFR models.
Kawasaki is listing MPG figures for some bikes but not for their super sports considering people who ride them aren't really concerned with mileage.
with an aftermarket air filter and a slight gearing change my Vulcan 500 can get 59 MPG highway (65MPH, 57MPG @ 80MPH). Around town I can expect 40 - 48 MPG (ham fisted and conservative throttle respectively).