- Wed Jun 07, 2017 4:18 pm
#68129
Stoichmetric is simply the ratio at which fuel is burned most completely. Whilst it is true that the ECU on bikes fitted with an O2 lambda sensor will endeavour to maintain the mixture to stoichmetric (around 14.7:1 air:fuel for petrol) so as to minimise exhaust gases, Dynojet et al make a living by selling aftermarket products such as Power Commanders. These essentially alter the air:fuel ratio to obtain optimum power, which for petrol is closer to 13:1. So if the fuel mixture is set for power rather than complete burn, the mixture will be richer and the impact on oil quality as the engine is run will be affected adversely, though probably not to a large extent. An easy way to establish the condition of oil is by how much the colour of the oil changes from a nice golden colour (or red) to a murky brown or black. Anyone who has a classic bike running on mineral oils will know how soon this happens after an oil change. Old Brit bike usually ran rich, especially at tickover. As I have fitted a carb to my C5 the oil blackens fairly quickly which is one of the reasons I change the oil annually irrespective of mileage, within reason. It becomes acidic as it is contaminated by the by-products of combustion, especially if the fuel is not burned completely. Semi-synthetic oils usually have a mineral oil base; fully synthetic oils are much superior and last longer - the choice between longlife and annual oil change regimes in the car world, such as VW dictates which type of oil is used, semi or full synthetic. Like I said, in my opinion those who use their bikes regularly and for decent mileages per ride can safely leave oil changes longer than those, like me, who only ride occasionally and for short distances (on my C5). BTW ethanol has a stoichmetric ratio of 7:1 or thereabouts. 10% ethanol in petrol (and I use the term loosely) equates to a 7% weaker mixture, which is why some engines run better on non-ethanol or 5% maximum ethanol fuel (ie 97 Octane which so far cannot contain more than 5% ethanol in the UK). The O2 sensor causes the ECU to drag the mixture back to stoichmetric for petrol, so compensates for the ethanol, but what if you have a carb, or a Power Commander? Neither can determine what fuel is being used......