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the phantom pieman 18-Jul-2005 13:10

Running temp
 
What is the normal running temp ( according the the gauge) on a 988? ... mine seems to run high ....

thanks

antonye 18-Jul-2005 13:10

In the middle of the guage, ie. needle straight up.

:D

rcgbob44 18-Jul-2005 15:32

My 998 usualy runs at 180 ish but yesterday, when caught in traffic, it was running at 200 ish.

In hot weather but on the move it should be about 170-180.

antonye 18-Jul-2005 16:00

ºF or ºC ? :D

That's why it's easier to say "needle straight up" as they're the same gauge but with a different scale on them.

the phantom pieman 18-Jul-2005 16:10

Mines a °c and runs a little hotter than that ...

50 mph in town and it will be at 90-95 .....

Desmo996r 18-Jul-2005 16:23

on open roads, mine normally runs at about 80'c
yesterday tho it was hitting 110'c :o

phillc 18-Jul-2005 16:33

I saw my 900ss above the 3/4 mark for the first time yesterday. This was at the end of a day's riding when I got back into town and hit traffic.

rockhopper 18-Jul-2005 17:10

Mine got to 214 yesterday in traffic.

Harv748 18-Jul-2005 17:13

I'm yet to see my SP above 1/3 of the guage...should I be worried?!?!

Shazaam! 18-Jul-2005 17:28

A bike should get up to temperature for best performance.

Duane Mitchel reported that he ran a series of tests to establish optimum running temp for a race bike and found that (185F) 85ºC was about perfect. Over that, they lost horsepower fairly quickly (down about 15 HP at 100ºC) and below that the same (down about 6 HP at 65ºC).

The computer uses the engine coolant temperature sensor to supply additional fuel while the engine is warming up. Engines need more fuel when for a cold start as there is no heat in the ports and chambers to keep the fuel atomized as vapor, so it condenses. Fuel as a liquid burns very badly in the combustion chamber, so throwing more at it ensures enough stays as vapor for some sort of combustion. Injected engines get a very nice fuel spray from the injectors and this is why injected engines behave better when cold.

In the Ducati system, the sensor tells the ECU to stop warm-up fuel enrichment at around 175°. So from a fuel correction standpoint, the proper operating temperature is above this value. Reduce the coolant temperature below this and you're not operating efficiently.

So cooler is not better from an operating perspective. YOU may feel more comfortable, but the bike is not operating at an optimum point on its fuel map.

In particular, I had to remove the water plus Water Wetter mixture from my 916's cooling system because it was running too cool.

On a day with a 75°F ambient air temperature, coolant temperatures would only reach 140 - 170°F (60 - 75°C.) I tried blocking off air flow to a section of the radiator, but temperatures still stayed below the gauge midpoint. At these temperatures, the ECU is still adding extra fuel for warm-up conditions (below 175°F.) The tailpipes were black from an overly-rich mixture and gas mileage was down.


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