OK gang, I've been inspired by Craig Vetter's motorcycle fuel efficiency contests, and I want to build a Gas Miser bike designed for regular, practical use.
(See Vetter's web page to learn about the contests, and how a motorcycle managed to get 470 mpg in (almost) normal traffic conditions.)
http://www.craigvetter.com/pages/470MPG/470MPG%20Main.htmlI've decided to try my hand at building a gas miser bike. Here are the parameters I've set:
First the target: I'm shooting for 150+ mpg (US gallons) in everday use, commuting to work, and recreating on the weekend.
1. It must be able to keep up with traffic at secondary road speeds (65 mph, without wrapping up the engine to get there.)
2. I want readily available, off the shelf parts availability for all the mechanical parts of the bike, so there can be no major modifications to the running gear unless the modified part is just as available as the original part it replaces.
3. No two-strokes. (I'm a former air quality enforcement attorney, so I know what comes out of two stroke exhausts. Two stroke engines, of any size, should be banned. For purposes of this project, they are!)
3. I want the fairing to enclose the bike fully enough to make riding in cold weather more comfortable. I suspect that any fairing design that achieves high gas mileage is likely to achieve this goal without much further modification anyway.
4. It must be comfortable to ride long distance. One of the problems Vetter noted in the entries in his contests is that most required a riding position that would be uncomfortable over a long distance. I'm thinking that I will want a sit-up-and-beg position much like our Honda SOHCs, but perhaps modified a bit, with the seat recessed down into the frame (in order to lower the rider's height, and thereby reduce wind resistance) and with a back rest built into the rear fairing. I'm planning a single-rider bike here, since that is the way most people ride 90% of the time anyway. I'm thinking about something along the lines of Vetter's streamliner bike, but not quite so laid back:
http://www.craigvetter.com/pages/470MPG/1981%20Fuel%20Economy.htmlSo here's a question for the collective brain here at SOHC. I can cover the design elements necessary to meet goals three and four. But what bike should I choose as a base model for the project, to satisfy elements 1 and 2? According to Vetter, some large displacement bikes in the early competitions achieved very resectible efficiencies, with nothing more than off-the-shelf Vetter fairings and a light touch with the throttle. Most of the entries in the later years were small displacement bikes, from 100 to 250 cc, though they did not uniformly perform better than large displacement bikes.
I'm thinking I should start with a 250cc cruiser style bike, because the low seating position will reduce wind resistance. Cycle World's efficiency feature gave good marks to the Suzuki GZ250, which gets in the range of 75 mpg. I understand that the Honda or Yamaha equivalents get similar mileage. It gets me a long way toward my goal to start with a bike that already gets me halfway there, before I put any sort of fairing or smaller sprocket on it.
I've also considered various of the Honda CB series twins and singles, just because I like the idea of starting with a familiar bike.
So choose two bikes, and tell me why you choose them. One bike in current production, and one that can be anything back to around 1970. But most importantly, tell me why you would choose that bikes, and how you would modify them to get better mileage.
I'll be doing testing with the base bike, over 1000 miles or so, to establish baseline performance before I start modifiying the bike. I'll try to do about 25% in town driving during the baseline testing, and 75% highway. Then I'll try to duplicate the same driving conditions and driving style after I modify the bike and install the fairing.
I'm pretty certain that I will actually build this experiment in the next year or so. Anybody want to join me, and modify their bike for fuel efficiency? We can compete on a percentage improvement basis, so that it doesn't matter whether we start with the same bike.
Any takers?