Then I stand corrected as mine only holds 3.5 gallons - I filled up 30 mins ago ;-)...and all my long distance riding Ive never gone more than 150 miles on a tank. Perhaps I have small tanks on both my K2 and K4...or I just ride too fast
cheers
Andy
I get the same as you. I ran my stock K5 out of gas on researve and the most it would take at the pump is about 3.5, maybe there is an extra gallon in there I am not aware of, maybe the original owner didn't check that option for the extra hidden gallon, who knows. Most I have ever gotten out of a tank is 180 miles (and I don't get that regularly), least I have gotten is 135 miles, on average I get about 140-150 on a tank before it is bone dry. I don't see a stock k0-k6 crossing 200 miles on a stock tank.
When I said ride for very long I was referring to the riding position of a poorly built bike, not the fuel capacity. You can stop fill up, streach, what have you but if the bike was uncomfortable before you will fatigue easier and never get back that energy riding making you day shorter. My point is this, there are well built and thought out bikes and there are thrown together because it looks cool bikes and the majority of bikes I am seeing with knee dents on stock tanks are not particularly well thought out (yes there are exceptions but not many).
Maybe, there aren't a lot of old bikes where ever members of this board are from, but I can tell you you can't trip in brooklyn without falling on some old crappy honda with clubman bars and maybe a poorly bashed in tank (half from the poorly mounted clubman bars, and some from half assed attempts at making knee dents in their tanks), done by someone who doesn't know what the heck they are doing but trying desperatly to look like they do. These bikes are usually poorly maintained, flat black out of a rattle can (not done well) and on the whole negelected. A good portion of them don't move under their own power for months on end. But their owners are always at bike night, talking about how badass their cafe bike is. it is bloody awful. I used to field half a dozen questions a week about clubmans and knee dents before I started to tell the little trolls to eff off.
seawebb11 - A tracy body is completely different and you know it. The tradeoff for loosing gallons of fuel is how much weight you save ditching all those stock heavy parts; sure the tracy body is heavy, but compared to a stock seat, rear fender, taillight, grab bar, tank setup it is a freakin feather. I would say the performance advantage of loosing all those heavy metal pieces makes up for how often you need to stop for fuel. If you lost capacity, and the bike didn't get anything out of it I would have to ask you why?
I betcha your controls setup with that body is not so uncomfortable that you could ride the bike all day despite filling up the 1.5 gallon tank, not wringing your wrists at every gas stop and packing it in after the second one because your back hurts.