everyone who attended the 3rd KB south get together saw
And it was 5lt diesel into the tank accidentally....tank filled so it was just over 18lt (abt 1:4 ratio)![]()
Went fine albeit smokeyand I had to bump start it after the 1st stop 50km later.....after that you'd be none the wiser anything had happened
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Initially from Palmerston to Moeraki it wasn't too bad but was getting a bit gruff by the time it rolled into Moeraki (Goblin was riding it, I was giving Doc's Brutale 910 a strop). Leaving Moeraki it had to be bump started...wasn't healthy but was running; smoking like a traction engine when the taps were opened (didn't like much above 5k) otherwise just a gentle blue haze of fumes![]()
We were heading to Oamaru so it was apt to have something pay homage to the steampunk capitalleaving there it started up fine, still smoking but getting a bit better and I kept distilling the mix at every chance & probably by the time another tanks worth of juice had gone through it was back to normal
pretty robust old mill them things!
May I be so bold as to suggest reading your owners manual?
Ironically enough, it was written to inform the owner (You in this case) as to the correct operation of your motorcycle, including, but noit limited to, service intervals, tyre pressures, correct fuel types, etc..
The user manual doesn't state which fuel to use, it only provides the minimum octane rating: 91 (or 87).
A Ninja 300 is tuned for low octane, so use 91. Using higher octane will delay combustion and reduce power and efficiency on an engine tuned for low octane. So using high octane in a 300 will cost you more, reduce efficiency, and cause more carbon build up over time.
wrong
wrongso use 91.
wrong (while lower octane is more susceptible to pre-ignition, higher octane will/can not retard the timing)Using higher octane will delay combustion and reduce power and efficiency on an engine tuned for low octane.
wrong (91 is shyte fuel, inefficient by design in term of calories vs kw, and more likely to foul, burn incompletely or "cause carbon build up". the cost aspect is questionable, while tank-for-tank premium costs more, often higher octane will get as many/more km, plus with more grin.)So using high octane in a 300 will cost you more, reduce efficiency, and cause more carbon build up over time.
damn, and i really wanted to say "five kinds of wrong" but that's only 4.
the correctest answer came at post#7 which is "try each and see"
but still. STFW.
Wrong as a 300 is tuned for 91 and earlier detonation
Wrong because the 300 won't make the most of the high octane, you'll get carbon build up because you're not getting the right combustion temps because half your combustion is happening in your exhaust.
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