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High Octane!

Started by Chopper75, May 15, 2019, 05:24:13 PM

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Chopper75

Been getting some popping, misfiresb and rough riding in the low range running 91 octane. I filled up with 93 today and the scoot ran amazing! Could 2 octane really make that much of a difference?

Ohio HD


Chopper75

Just seems odd. Have to try this in my Ironhead. Been riding that much longer and have a better baseline. Never really paid much attention.

Ohio HD

I can tell a difference in my bike with the 124" because of the compression. My 96" bike, it runs on almost anything. These are Twin Cams.

Chopper75

My Shovel is only an 80" so I figured it would run good on 91. Coups be bored out. Haven't had to take the top end off yet

Ohio HD

Shovels, Pans, Iron Heads, all the older HD's with hemi style chambers and big domed pistons have less then good flame travel at combustion. So they do tend to knock, detonate, or just run rough with less quality fuel. HD went all the way down to 7:1 compression on some 80" motors to try and run the crappy fuel in the 80's.

Chopper75

Great bit of history right there. I'm assuming they changed over after the AMF days. Both my Shovel and Iron are AMF's. Guess it's 93 octane from here on out.

Chopper75

Just realized that I have J&E 9.5:1 piston in the shovel...That explains it! Higher compression, higher octane. Bet it would run even better with some non-ethanol 100 octane. Way too expensive and hard to find nowadays though (NJ sucks!)

Burnout

Dual plug it, problem solved plus more power made, eliminating the need for hard to find fuel.
They don't call me Ironhead Rick just because I'm "hard headed"

One4Tone

...you might have had some questionable fuel prior to getting the higher octane. I find temperature plays into it as well. On a hot day you might get a ping especially if your accelerating from low RPM. I allways use high test..91 octane minimum. Sometimes out in the country it's harder to find. Allways fill up in town before taking off. Years ago I used to buy Avgas (aviation fuel) from the local airport. They had 100 octane and 120 octane. You could run a full tank halfway refill with regular and still ran strong. I have a 67 chevy2, 350 cube, 11 to1 TRW's pistons. Years ago I used to get the gas from the airport occasionally...the good old days...well at least I still got the old 67...but eventually when they stopped selling the gas after 911...I had to change the heads to drop the compression...she still has the rumble...but not like before with them old double hump heads....

Pete_Vit

never saw a difference in my 80" EVO, but my EVO Sporty wants 93 when temps get over 75* :nix:
93 XLH1200 - 96 FXSTS - 2010 Ultra Glide Classic
www.facebook.com/harleypartsch

76shuvlinoff

May 17, 2019, 02:44:23 AM #11 Last Edit: May 17, 2019, 02:53:15 AM by 76shuvlinoff
I was always under the impression that if it doesn't pre-detonate you have zero need for higher octane and that octane didn't make power, it allows higher compression.     Truth?

I (usually) run 93 in my TC because I've been caught in traffic jams at with over 100F coming off the pavement. Plus I can't promise I'll get quality fuel at every hole in the wall station.   I (usually) run 93 in my shovel stroker, cyl pressures were at 205 but I got it down to 185 with a cam change.  The ugly truth is I am inept at setting up a VOES and tossed it.
Critics are men who watch a battle from a high place, then come down and shoot the survivors.
 - Ernest Hemingway

JW113

Truth. There is no more "energy" in 100 octane than there is in 87 octane. The various formulations of gasoline can change the rate of the chemical reation, i.e. "burn rate" to some degree, but the biggest difference is their self-combustion temperature. Unlike Diesel engines that use cylinder pressure/temperature to ignite the fuel and thus want as low a self-combustion temperature as possible, gasoline engines need the opposite: don't ignite until the spark plug fires.

-JW
2004 FLHRS   1977 FLH Shovelhead  1992 FLSTC
1945 Indian Chief   1978 XL Bobber

Burnout

I have seen increased levels of water in the fuel in the last year.

Bikes that sit over the winter, especially with the fuel valve on.
Water will settle in the carb, as the fuel evaporates, more fuel (with water in it) is admitted to the carb.
That fuel evaporates and leaves the water, and more fuel is admitted to the carb.

After a few miles of popping and banging the water in the carb got sucked out replaced with fresh fuel?
Sounds good to me...
They don't call me Ironhead Rick just because I'm "hard headed"

bluehighwayfx

One advantage to living out in the booger woods (rural Virginia) is we can buy HiTest ethanol free gas. I don't know about y'all but I think the ethanol attracts water and the air here can be wrung out like a sponge.  So even if it doesn't need HiTest no ethanol good, water bad.
Killing bugs at high speed since 1978, same shovel, different day.

bobrk1

It's  funny  how  you  look  for  93 now , when  I  got  my  license  regular  was  94 and  Hi test  was  100 and  this  was  the  cheap  station damn I  feel  old  lol

dirtymike

de tune when you use low octane fuel. Benefits of having points and a timing light.

76shuvlinoff

Quote from: dirtymike on August 27, 2019, 07:47:01 AM
de tune when you use low octane fuel. Benefits of having points and a timing light.

Timing light, I got none and I'm not fighting the spray from the timing hole.  Advance till it pings and back it off.  :teeth:
Critics are men who watch a battle from a high place, then come down and shoot the survivors.
 - Ernest Hemingway

crock

Quote from: 76shuvlinoff on August 27, 2019, 06:14:44 PM
Quote from: dirtymike on August 27, 2019, 07:47:01 AM
de tune when you use low octane fuel. Benefits of having points and a timing light.

Timing light, I got none and I'm not fighting the spray from the timing hole.  Advance till it pings and back it off.  :teeth:

Installed one of these and now its like timing a small block Chevy
Crock

dirtymike

no timing light, good tool to have with points. timing by ear is not accurate.