pump gas vs avgas
pump gas vs avgas
I recently had to switch from the 100LL avgas that I've been running, (I forgot to pick it up at work), to some Sunoco 94 I bought on my way to the track. The bike actually seemed to run with a little bit more grunt to it. Like more bottom end, or torque. Anybody have any ideas why? Or do you think I'm just old and senile, and just imagined it.
'99 CR500 beer can conversion
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You only run the octane you need to keep from detonating, race gas in a stock motor will usually make less power unless it is oxygenated. Your after a burn for the fuel to stop burning at a certain degree after it has completed spark.
Race gas burns slower so in the case of a 2 stroke you want all the fuel to be done burning around when the exhaust port is going to open. Because race gas burns slower the energy used to drive the piston down can escape out the exhaust port because it is burning at a slower rate and is to late in completing the burn process and the port opens allowing enregy out.
This is why they have different octane fuels for different style motors, race motors, each motor depending on how it is setup will burn fuel at a different rate and in order to get the proper burn rate speed after spark to stop burning at proper degree from TDC for max performance on a certain engine combo + not to detonate if you are having that problem.
So you will find if you just run the fuel a motor wants to not detonate you are usually making the best power as well for your setup .
Race gas burns slower so in the case of a 2 stroke you want all the fuel to be done burning around when the exhaust port is going to open. Because race gas burns slower the energy used to drive the piston down can escape out the exhaust port because it is burning at a slower rate and is to late in completing the burn process and the port opens allowing enregy out.
This is why they have different octane fuels for different style motors, race motors, each motor depending on how it is setup will burn fuel at a different rate and in order to get the proper burn rate speed after spark to stop burning at proper degree from TDC for max performance on a certain engine combo + not to detonate if you are having that problem.
So you will find if you just run the fuel a motor wants to not detonate you are usually making the best power as well for your setup .
Last edited by Slow old Fart on May 28th, 2008, 7:51 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Slow old Fart wrote:If I am not mistaken avgas has deicing agents in it and is not really designed for a 2 cycle sea leval engine?

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Slow old Fart wrote:That is true alot of times race gas will allow you to run leaner because it burns cooler and you can make more HP from the rise in gas temperatures. It is a fine line on tuning between max power and max siezure.nmdesertrider wrote:If the SG isn't exactly the same the diff could be jetting





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AlisoBob wrote:Octane and BTU are separate parameters...
Also true.
But there is more power to be made with lower octane gas, in theory you shoud run as low as possible before it starts pinging.
Coolness list by 90cr500guy
Bob's = 50/50
Cepek = cool
Solidbro = cool
Brit = loser
Stoffer = 1 up from Brit
MFDB = cool
Danny = ok
Bob's = 50/50
Cepek = cool
Solidbro = cool
Brit = loser
Stoffer = 1 up from Brit
MFDB = cool
Danny = ok
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Making me break out the wiki
"To a certain extent a fuel with a higher carbon ratio will be more dense than a fuel with a lower carbon ratio. Thus it is possible to formulate high octane fuels that carry less energy per liter than lower octane fuels"
"while engines perform best when using fuel with the octane rating for which they were designed and any increase in performance by using a fuel with a different octane rating is minimal or even imaginary,"
"Burn Rates- That's the ticket!!
If you take that same fuel that worked well in the above V8, and run it in an engine, like a cbr900, with it's lower cranking compression and lower combustion chamber temps, it will, without a doubt, burn much too slowly at those lower temps and pressures and reach maximum cylinder pressure too far after TDC for best power.
Things generally burn slower when they are cooler and vice versa. Peak cylinder pressure will occur much past TDC - decreasing the power produced if you keep the same ignition timing.
You can advance ignition timing to try to recover power, but that will cause the air/fuel mixture to burn earlier in the crank stroke and spend, percentage wise, more of the energy produced by the expanding, burning mixture, pushing back down, trying to prevent the piston from rising up to the power stroke - robbing power.
If you MUST use a slow burning fuel, which USUALLY has a high octane rating, advancing the ignition timing will lessen the power loss, but the best results are usually obtained with the quickest burning fuel obtainable, that, of course, doesn't "knock"."
"Does using a fuel with higher octane numbers automatically make more power?
Not unless they are preventing "knock"."

"To a certain extent a fuel with a higher carbon ratio will be more dense than a fuel with a lower carbon ratio. Thus it is possible to formulate high octane fuels that carry less energy per liter than lower octane fuels"
"while engines perform best when using fuel with the octane rating for which they were designed and any increase in performance by using a fuel with a different octane rating is minimal or even imaginary,"
"Burn Rates- That's the ticket!!
If you take that same fuel that worked well in the above V8, and run it in an engine, like a cbr900, with it's lower cranking compression and lower combustion chamber temps, it will, without a doubt, burn much too slowly at those lower temps and pressures and reach maximum cylinder pressure too far after TDC for best power.
Things generally burn slower when they are cooler and vice versa. Peak cylinder pressure will occur much past TDC - decreasing the power produced if you keep the same ignition timing.
You can advance ignition timing to try to recover power, but that will cause the air/fuel mixture to burn earlier in the crank stroke and spend, percentage wise, more of the energy produced by the expanding, burning mixture, pushing back down, trying to prevent the piston from rising up to the power stroke - robbing power.
If you MUST use a slow burning fuel, which USUALLY has a high octane rating, advancing the ignition timing will lessen the power loss, but the best results are usually obtained with the quickest burning fuel obtainable, that, of course, doesn't "knock"."
"Does using a fuel with higher octane numbers automatically make more power?
Not unless they are preventing "knock"."
Coolness list by 90cr500guy
Bob's = 50/50
Cepek = cool
Solidbro = cool
Brit = loser
Stoffer = 1 up from Brit
MFDB = cool
Danny = ok
Bob's = 50/50
Cepek = cool
Solidbro = cool
Brit = loser
Stoffer = 1 up from Brit
MFDB = cool
Danny = ok
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It is semantics, but compression is related to torque and power. The resistance of the fuel to detonation allows greater performance to be achieved without adverse effects. The bottom line is that in most cases running race gas like C-12 in an engine designed for pump gas is unnecessary. The are other VP fuels that have a greater oxygen content and therefore claim to make more power - with jetting changes - but I have only heard of them used with 4-stroke engines.
Michael Stiles
2007 Honda CR500R-AF
2007 Honda CR500R-AF
With these 1200 cc sled motors I ended up with 13:1 cr and the lowest octane possible for the (altitude specific) and timing at 16* @ 8000 RPM. At sea level on the dyno a 50/50 mix with pump and C12 netted 163 lbs of torque peak. By testing at sea level off the dyno, clutching set up confirmed previously stated by others that using higher octane when not needed can hurt performance. In other words, the mix hurt it at elevation where pump gas gave best performace. The highest compression possible without deto made a happy motor. FWW


The BTU of pump gas is the same accross the octane numbers.
If you want to see proof I can show you dyno sheets of several HP INCREASE by running lower octane numbers. My CBR1000RR LOST 2HP by running 100 octane over 92.
Ask VP what the octane of their super nasty hot U4 or U2 oxygenated fuels are...89. You can get 6-8HP just by switching a 4 stroke 4 cyl. sport bike motor over to it, and while much of the gain is in the oxy, why do you think they only mix it 89 octane??
If you want to see proof I can show you dyno sheets of several HP INCREASE by running lower octane numbers. My CBR1000RR LOST 2HP by running 100 octane over 92.
Ask VP what the octane of their super nasty hot U4 or U2 oxygenated fuels are...89. You can get 6-8HP just by switching a 4 stroke 4 cyl. sport bike motor over to it, and while much of the gain is in the oxy, why do you think they only mix it 89 octane??

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