When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
My '96 EG has never got that kinda mileage either. It don't matter whether I'm blastin around home or cruisin' to Georgia I get mid 30s. It has 10.5 wiesco pistons, bigger valves, Ev-27 cam, D&D Fatcat, and a CV carb.
Last edited by totinthapeach; Oct 21, 2009 at 01:08 PM.
running at its optimum will get best driveability, power and gas mileage for the combo you have. i have a stock evo with very mild bolt ons. if my bike should get 50 mpg than i want it to run at its optimum.
if 50mpg is not the norm then i'm happy the way it is.
Bone stock off the showroom floor is the only time I've ever seen 50mph on any of the HD's I've owned.
Stock 1340, ported and polished heads with larger intake valves, a mild 0.500" lift cam (OEM was 0.465"), S&S Super E with 72 main and 29 intermediate jets, Cycle Shack duals with baffles, Compufire ignition, and regeared with a 48-tooth rear sprocket compared to a stock 51-tooth (4-sp and chain drive), and....
I've gotten 50-55 mpg out of every tank of 89-93 octane fuel I've put through the bike in the last 10k+ miles.....and the engine has 105k miles with the last top end being something like 60k miles ago.
Last edited by Kramer Krazy; Oct 21, 2009 at 02:45 PM.
Mid 30's here at 70-80. Lower at higher speeds, higher at lower speeds. With our "Barn Door" aerodynamics, we're doing good for that. Wind will really make a difference. I have got 40's, especially on slower 2 lane roads and I think I did a little better with the Screaming Eagle carb, a Keihin from about 1988, than with the S&S, but it sure runs better with the S&S. I'm thinking about going EFI with a wide band and Megasquirt, but it does run quite well right now.
The Sportster gets about 50 right now. I could probably tune that a bit more, but it's running well, so don't f with it. With the original carb in the mountains, 55 MPH speed limit, before the windshield and with Dr. Linda new to the bike and not grabbing a handfull, we saw 90+ regularly and 100 a couple times. Of course, it was so lean that it was dangerous to pull out in traffic.
What you are getting isn't bad. However you might squeeze a few more out of it by undoing some of the "jet kit" modifacations. First check and see if they drilled out the slide, then check out the spring. A lighter spring and a modified slide allow them to rise sooner. This raises the already smaller needle and allows more fuel to flow in most RPM ranges. This is great if you ride it like you stole it, but if you are doing that you usually aren't worried about mileage. Hope this helps.
40-ish is pretty good for a bagger (heavy) with a batwing fairing (wind drag). Most of the guys claiming 50 are exgaggerating, or riding a lighter bike. I recall a friend of mine claiming mid 30's on his 1996 EFI Road King, when it was new. I would agree with the others that tuning for every last MPG is a bad idea on an air cooled motor, the extra fuel keeps em cool.
FWIW, My FXD was pulling down mid 40's, up to 50 highway only, before I bumped the compression, running a bit on the lean side according to the plugs, but w/o any dead spots or rough areas throughout the RPM range.
After I bumped the compression to 10.5:1, the engine wanted to be fattened up everywhere, now it reads perfect on the plugs, runs like a raped ape, and knocks down mid 30's, perhaps pushing 40 highway only, which isn't very often.
My bike has stock unported heads, an EV-51, Mikuni 42, Supertrapp 2-1, Forcewinder A/C, Dyna 2Ki, amongst other things. And has been stripped of any unneeded weight. 24/48 Chain conversion.
I'll update after I drop in the close ratio 6-speed and regear to 22/51. Which will be any day now.
90 FLHTCU with basani 2:1 exhaust, a hypercharger air cleaner, and a 180 main jet, 45 low jet (I think), and I get 42 almost all the time. When I was running at 80 across texas it dropped to about 38 once and once in the steep hills it dropped, but other than that it stays right around 42 for my normal riding conditions.
Our 80" got about 40 mpg and the 113" gets about 35 mpg. I don't mind spending more money for gasoline but would feel better knowing I could go further without stopping for gasoline. We always use cash to buy gasoline. I hate stopping for gas at any gas station that requires you to pre-pay, and the number of gas stations in our area that allow you to pay after you fill up is getting smaller - so when we get about 120 miles on the tankful of gas we start looking for a station that does not require us to pre-pay. In our area, most Turkey Hill stores will turn on the pumps for a motorcycle without pre-paying.
Well, I'm one of those who bragged about 50 mpg at moderate speeds... recently pulled the heads and the cylinders were white-streaked from heat. And even with the setup I was running, it was down to 33 mpg at high speeds (80mph) in a cross wind and mid 40's with any cross wind at moderate speeds. So I had to come off the setup I was running...
Cross wind wind or even a breeze will make a tremendous difference, not to mention speed and your throttle habits and how many times it's started cold on a tank of fuel. And, how you check the mileage will make a difference too. If low 40's is the best you get under any condition driving like an old lady (as I do most times), then you might improve on that a bit, but you're real close. Idle screw adjustment will make a good bit of difference as will the taper of your needle. There are about 40 diferent needles that will fit that carb I just found out recently...
And remember, all these "modifications" you read about are for performance and seldom equate to economy. However, if it's too lean mileage can suffer as easily as being too rich. It's the Goldilocks and the 3 bears story - needs to be "just right."
Slideshow: Jason Momoa's latest restoration project blends 1920s Harley-Davidsons with modern electric technology, creating some of the most unusual hybrid motorcycles ever built.
Harley-Davidson Fat Boy Becomes a Dark, Decepticon-Inspired Custom
Slideshow: Killer Custom's latest build relies on styling changes rather than performance upgrades, giving the cruiser an entirely different personality.
7 Surprising Harley-Davidson Products that Are Not Motorcycles
Slideshow: The bar-and-shield logo shows up on far more than motorcycles, some of the company's most unexpected products have nothing to do with riding.
Slideshow: From the troubled AMF years to modern misfires, these bikes earned reputations for reliability issues, questionable engineering, or disappointing performance.
Crazy Bunderbike Build Looks Amazing, But Is It Impossible to Ride?
Slideshow: The Swiss custom shop has taken a Harley Softail and stretched it into something so long and low that it looks closer to a rolling sculpture than a conventional motorcycle.