• Ciao Guest - You’ve landed at the ultimate Guzzi site. NEW FORUM REGISTRATIONS REQUIRE EMAIL ACTIVATION - CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDER - Use the CONTACT above if you need help. New to the forum? For all new members, we require ONE post in the Introductions section at the bottom, in order to post in most of the other sections. ALWAYS TRY A SEARCH BEFORE STARTING A NEW TOPIC - Most questions you may have, have likely been already answered. DON'T BE A DRIVE-BY POSTER: As a common courtesy, check back in and reply within 24 hours, or your post will be deleted. Note there's decades of heavily experienced Guzzi professionals on this site, all whom happily give endless amounts of their VALUABLE time for free; BE COURTEOUS AND RESPECTFUL!
  • There is ZERO tolerance on personal attacks and ANY HYPERLINKS to PRODUCT(S) or other competing website(s), including personal pages, social media or other Forums. This ALSO INCLUDES ECU DIAGnostic software, questions and mapping. We work very hard to offer commercially supported products and to keep info relevant here. First offense is a note, second is a warning, third time will get you banned from the site. We don't have the time to chase repeat (and ignorant) offenders. This is NOT a social media platform; It's an ad-free, privately funded website, in small help with user donations. Be sure to see the GTM STORE link above; ALL product purchases help support the site, or you can upgrade your Forum profile or DONATE via the link above.
  • Be sure to see the GTM STORE link also above for our 700+ product inventory, including OEM parts and many of our 100% Made-in-SoCal-USA GTM products and engine kits. In SoCal? Click the SERVICE tab above for the best in service, tires, tuning and installation of our products or custom work, and don't miss our GT MotoCycles® (not) art on the BUILDS tab above. WE'RE HERE ONLINE ONLY - NO PHONE CALLS MADE OR RECEIVED - DO NOT EMAIL AND ASK QUESTIONS OR ASK TO CALL YOU.
  • Like the new V100, GuzziTech is full throttle into the future! We're now running on an all-new server and we've updated our Forum software. The visual differences are obvious, but hopefully you'll notice the super-fast speed. If you notice any glitches or have any issues, please post on the Site Support section at the bottom. If you haven't yet, please upgrade your account which is covered in the Site Support section or via the DONATE tab above, which gives you full site access including the DOWNLOADS section. We really appreciate every $ and your support to keep this site ad-free. Create an account, sign in, upgrade your account, and enjoy. See you on the road in 2024.

V9/V7 III fuel mileage and range (discussion and please post yours)

jkristjan

Tuned and Synch'ed
Joined
Aug 12, 2016
Messages
41
Location
Tallinn
Ran a little test on my 2016 V9 yesterday. From fill to fill 271km (168 miles), that included riding about 50km (31 miles) with the fuel light on. Diligently measured and calculated fuel economy was 4.35l/100km (54mpg). This was B-road riding in fine weather around the 90km/h (55mph) mark, not faster, not slower.

Some conclusions.

1) With the 15l tank, the actual back road cruising range before stalling is a sure 300km (190 miles)

2) The fuel economy measurements by the ECU are accurate, the average burn rate on the dash ended up being exactly the same as my manual calculations

3) The 15l tank is not so small after all, considering the better fuel economy of newer bikes. Even bikes like Honda NC750S (meant to be a very practical machine) have tiny tanks (14 liters in that case) but that is made up by good fuel economy (3l/100km or 78mpg). By gut feeling, I put it to you that the 22l tanks on the carbureted bikes of 70s and 80s were roughly equal to the 15l tank on the V9 today.

Your findings and thoughts?
 
I have the V9 Bobber, have been getting around 170KM before the fuel light turns on. However when I fill immediately I can put in about 9 Litres max, so I think my senor is perhaps a bit high in the tank. I haven't run it much with the light on but I will update this if I end up running it dry. Also I tend to be uh "spirited" in my riding; accelerating quickly and riding fast. The bulk of my riding is city commuting, with part of the trip going at 90-100 KPH.
 
I have the V9 Bobber, have been getting around 170KM before the fuel light turns on. However when I fill immediately I can put in about 9 Litres max, so I think my senor is perhaps a bit high in the tank. I haven't run it much with the light on but I will update this if I end up running it dry. Also I tend to be uh "spirited" in my riding; accelerating quickly and riding fast. The bulk of my riding is city commuting, with part of the trip going at 90-100 KPH.

Nope, your sensor is not different from others, this is exactly where it would light up, some 9 liters after a normal fill up, 170 to 190km depending on riding conditions and weather.

People fill up their bikes differently though. When you sit on it and hold it upright, you can really fill it to brim. As opposed to putting it on the sidestand and filling only as much as it can take in that position.
 
Yep I get just over 200kms before the fuel light comes on. When I go to fill up its still got nearly 5 litres to go. I agree that 300kms should be easy but having the fuel light coming on so early makes me nervous. Would prefer came on with about say 2 litres to go.
Cheers
Stephen D
Tasmania
 
Thanks for your posts, I am going to collect a new V9 tomorrow and now I know I can keep going till I find a cheap gas station, I don't have to panic and stop at the first one I come to.
A fuel gauge would be better though . . . . . . . .
But at least nowadays we have grown up from the days when you were doing 80 on the highway and the fuel just suddenly cut off with no warning, and you are drifting down the road trying to find the reserve fuel tap. . . . .
 
Back
Top