dpep
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Living in Florida I do almost all of my riding at sea level. I notice that when I occasionally ride at higher elevations my performance and mileage are down a little and I have to be more mindful of passing and the amount of grade I am pulling. I can tell some difference in as little as 1000-2000 feet. My 850 has never had anything but stock pipes and jetting which makes me wonder about the models of that bike that were sold in Colorado or some other mountainous state. Are all carburetted bikes sold with the same set up and if so, what barometric pressure would they be optimised for?
This is probably the main appeal a more modern bike would have for me right now, fuel injection that would automatically adjust to changes in altitude/air pressure. But then I got to thinking. Since the problem is less air in the mixture, could one compensate by letting more flow into the airbox? Perhaps even getting trick with an improvised set of vents that could be cracked more open as the air got thinner?
This is probably the main appeal a more modern bike would have for me right now, fuel injection that would automatically adjust to changes in altitude/air pressure. But then I got to thinking. Since the problem is less air in the mixture, could one compensate by letting more flow into the airbox? Perhaps even getting trick with an improvised set of vents that could be cracked more open as the air got thinner?