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Which 1000cc best Mpg and tank range ??

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jeddy11
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PostPosted: 09:40 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Which 1000cc best Mpg and tank range ?? Reply with quote

Done a lot of research (some) and notice as soon as you start talking 1000cc the mpg is usually down to 35 or less Shocked

Are there any 1000cc bikes that return good mpg and tank ranges or are they not designed with such criterias ?

Just looking at what bike to get in the future but being a tight wad i like good mpg and i hate filling up so good tank range too..

An all rounder would be preferable something to commute (fair weather), trips to coast and general hooning required and big is beatiful lol.
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Copycat73
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PostPosted: 09:48 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

if this is of any use ?

ZZR14 D8FABS 45-47mpg 220-225 miles

YZFR1 5VY 45-50mpg 180- 198 miles
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MarJay
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PostPosted: 10:04 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you want the performance you kind of have to pay by accepting lower fuel consumption to be honest. Bikes aren't very aerodynamic (compared to cars) and generally performance bikes are designed with economy last in the mix really.

If I were you I'd consider something smaller like a Street Triple or Daytona 675. My Street does about 47mpg but has a good amount of power and performance. I certainly don't think you'd really need more for the road.
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BTTD
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PostPosted: 10:16 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Er, if you're looking for a fantastic classic investment as well as reasonable mpg I've got a BMW K1 that I will one day be selling..... Smile

That aside, there are plenty of big bikes that still return decent mileage, depending how you ride. Has your research included this?

https://www.ride.co.uk/Fuel-Economy-Challenge/
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mentalboy
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PostPosted: 10:23 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have had 49mpg average out of my zzr1100 on occasions (dependent upon the accuracy of the trip odometer).
Some folks have claimed 55mpg on theirs BUT a zed's not for bimbling around on and the downside is that when I get throttle happy I've also seen 28mpg returns on a tank.
With a tank that's just over 5 gallons that means a return of anywhere between 228 and 147 miles
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doggone
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PostPosted: 10:25 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Depends a lot on how you ride, obviously with a bigger bike like that you want to let it rip from time to time and have to accept low mpg, but you can still get reasonable figures by accelerating gently and keeping to the speed limits on your commute or touring jaunts.

My Bandit 1200 would do about 50mpg on longer gentle runs, a TL1000R about 60mpg, my current BT1100 is 55mpg or so too.
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raesewell
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PostPosted: 10:29 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Take a look here, it may give you some idea
https://www.ride.co.uk/Fuel-Economy-Challenge/
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GhostRider
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PostPosted: 10:36 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

doggone wrote:
Depends a lot on how you ride, obviously with a bigger bike like that you want to let it rip from time to time and have to accept low mpg, but you can still get reasonable figures by accelerating gently and keeping to the speed limits on your commute or touring jaunts.

My Bandit 1200 would do about 50mpg on longer gentle runs, a TL1000R about 60mpg, my current BT1100 is 55mpg or so too.


Interesting, when I had a hornet 600 across the board people would swear blind that you'd struggle to get 100 miles before the last drop of fuel combusted in the engine, whereas I'd routinely get 140 out of it (record was 160). Conversely I struggle to get much more than 100 out of a Tl1000r. Would refuel after 140 miles with a GSXR1000 K4.

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nowhere.elysium
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PostPosted: 10:39 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

GhostRider wrote:
Conversely I struggle to get much more than 100 out of my Tl1000R before it explodes, again.


Edited for truthiness.
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GhostRider
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PostPosted: 10:41 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

nowhere.elysium wrote:
GhostRider wrote:
Conversely I struggle to get much more than 100 out of my Tl1000R before it explodes, again.


Edited for truthiness.


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nowhere.elysium
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PostPosted: 10:44 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

GhostRider wrote:
Why do you delight in mocking me Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad
Love you really Razz
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doggone
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PostPosted: 10:44 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

raesewell wrote:
Take a look here, it may give you some idea
https://www.ride.co.uk/Fuel-Economy-Challenge/


That shows plenty of bikes returning quite good figures.
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Richy CB1000
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PostPosted: 10:59 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Topped the old girl up, 23 litres from dry it's 25 litres so just in the reserve.

That's a usable roughly 4.5 gallons before reserve. Riding normally well probably a bit gentler than most hoonigans it'll be on around 190-200 miles before reserve.

So roughly 45pmg best
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mentalboy
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PostPosted: 11:41 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

doggone wrote:
raesewell wrote:
Take a look here, it may give you some idea
https://www.ride.co.uk/Fuel-Economy-Challenge/


That shows plenty of bikes returning quite good figures.


... but only for current models
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G
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PostPosted: 13:25 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Re: Which 1000cc best Mpg and tank range ?? Reply with quote

Why choose an arbitrary cylinder capacity if you're worried by economy?

Something like a CB1000R is massively different to a S1000RR - the latter managing not far off twice the power if you add a full system and the like.

I've never been able to get good fuel economy from bikes - though I'm getting pretty good at doing it with 4 wheelers, often getting a lot higher than book value. Right hand issues.

I suspect that you could get ok economy from big sports bikes if you ride them appropriately - stick it in top gear with gentle throttle input. Even at motorway speeds, the low gearing means fairly high revs.
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MinhDinh
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PostPosted: 13:48 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you ride a bike for fun, then fuel is no object! If it's commuting then why is there a want for a 1K cc bike?
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G
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PostPosted: 13:49 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

MinhDinh wrote:
If you ride a bike for fun, then fuel is no object! If it's commuting then why is there a want for a 1K cc bike?

Range of power, for me.

But I'd sacrifice that if I was bothered by fuel economy.
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Acemastr
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PostPosted: 14:12 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I couldn't get lower than 40mpg on my CBR600RR, and it was never ridden gently, think i managed 52mpg at best on a long trip
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MinhDinh
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PostPosted: 14:58 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

G wrote:
MinhDinh wrote:
If you ride a bike for fun, then fuel is no object! If it's commuting then why is there a want for a 1K cc bike?

Range of power, for me.

But I'd sacrifice that if I was bothered by fuel economy.


Suppose it makes it easier to ride with a range of power.

What was the MPG? My friend wants to get a Blade to commute 30 miles twice. He said he can't afford to pay 10 quid a day on transport.

I am thinking the fuel alone may cost 10 quid for 60 miles.

I recall my days on my 636 I got 80 miles with 20 quid in 2011. Lots of red lights and speed cams so I did have to start and stop a lot however.
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G
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PostPosted: 15:03 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I never paid attention to mpg - I wouldn't have spent a good bit of money on a 4 year old (at the time) litre bike for a circa-13 mile roundtrip if I was worried by fuel.

Think I spent around £20 a week, but would use it for other bits and pieces - town at lunch time etc.

Narrow bike with a first gear that goes up to 103mph on the clocks - and will still pull faster than most cars in-gear when it's in top gear at town speeds.
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yen_powell
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PostPosted: 19:17 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm averaging 47mpg from my Varadero. That rarely drops below 90mph cruising speed on my commute until I hit London. If I could manage to stick to 70 it would probably rise to 50mpg+ but I would nod off.

It tells you your consumption on the dash display as you ride it, so you can see what causes the engine to glug it and what makes it more frugal.
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Pigeon
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PostPosted: 19:51 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

MarJay wrote:

If I were you I'd consider something smaller like a Street Triple or Daytona 675. My Street does about 47mpg but has a good amount of power and performance. I certainly don't think you'd really need more for the road.


Jeddy11 does seem intent on "big is beautful", not he's trying to make up for something or it includes his preference in women Smile

My STR averages 55mpg (gear changes around 7k). If changes are around 10k it drops to 53mpg

Triumph claim at 50mph it should do 68.8mpg apparently

But they also claimed its a 17.4 ltr tank, which means there's 4ltrs you can never use, or they are incorrect. I get around 140 miles to warning light, then guessing 20 more to empty. It _should_ do 210 to empty, but is more like 160.
Coming from a bike that did 275 to a tank, its noticeable. So googled and found a guy who was equally anal, but had actually measured the tank by running it until he stalled, concluded it was 13 litres IIRC.

I agree with you though, it seems pretty good for British roads and towns etc. Agile and more relaxed riding position. 76mph in first gear, 0-60 < 3.5 seconds and THAT noise Smile
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Vracktal
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PostPosted: 20:39 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I get 50mpg dead on my BMW R1200r, mix of 20 miles motorway at 90mph then 15 miles inner city London 2x a day. And I don't ride especially gently. The BMW boxer's a bit of a special case though due to the unusual revrange & torque curve.

Tank of petrol is good for 220 miles before I refuel, max I ever got was 255 miles but that was all motorway.
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Polarbear
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PostPosted: 20:46 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Pigeon wrote:
MarJay wrote:

If I were you I'd consider something smaller like a Street Triple or Daytona 675. My Street does about 47mpg but has a good amount of power and performance. I certainly don't think you'd really need more for the road.


Jeddy11 does seem intent on "big is beautful", not he's trying to make up for something or it includes his preference in women Smile

My STR averages 55mpg (gear changes around 7k). If changes are around 10k it drops to 53mpg

Triumph claim at 50mph it should do 68.8mpg apparently

But they also claimed its a 17.4 ltr tank, which means there's 4ltrs you can never use, or they are incorrect. I get around 140 miles to warning light, then guessing 20 more to empty. It _should_ do 210 to empty, but is more like 160.
Coming from a bike that did 275 to a tank, its noticeable. So googled and found a guy who was equally anal, but had actually measured the tank by running it until he stalled, concluded it was 13 litres IIRC.

I agree with you though, it seems pretty good for British roads and towns etc. Agile and more relaxed riding position. 76mph in first gear, 0-60 < 3.5 seconds and THAT noise Smile


Shocked My STR never ever got above 45 mpg. All I can think was I did screw the tits off it all the time after downsizing to it from a busa.
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-Matt-
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PostPosted: 21:05 - 21 Feb 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

raesewell wrote:
Take a look here, it may give you some idea
https://www.ride.co.uk/Fuel-Economy-Challenge/
Quote:
Suzuki Burgman 400 - 67.1MPG
BMW F650GS 67.1MPG

Taking bets on Rogers favourite number being 67.1 Thinking

I think it depends a hell of a lot on how you ride. My ZX6 does anything from 30-45mpg on average going by a lot of sites like Fuelly. I've had it upto low 50's before though being careful.
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