Don't take the ****, I'm only asking...
Don't take the ****, I'm only asking...
Author
Discussion

essexplumber

Original Poster:

7,756 posts

197 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
Why are there no diesel motorbikes/mopeds etc?

anonymous-user

78 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
There are. Mainly from the military and usa.

kambites

70,814 posts

245 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
Traditionally, diesel engines have always had a very poor power to weight ratio.

thinfourth2

32,414 posts

228 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
There are

Royal Enfield made one

There isn't any main stream ones

essexplumber

Original Poster:

7,756 posts

197 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
kambites said:
Traditionally, diesel engines have always had a very poor power to weight ratio.
That would make sense. I imagine a diesel bike would go forever on a tank of said fuel wouldn't it?

Hugo a Gogo

23,427 posts

257 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
Royal Enfield made one in India

they were crap, but got 200mpg


kambites

70,814 posts

245 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
essexplumber said:
kambites said:
Traditionally, diesel engines have always had a very poor power to weight ratio.
That would make sense. I imagine a diesel bike would go forever on a tank of said fuel wouldn't it?
I suppose so, but it seems that range has never been of much concern for bike manufacturers. I suppose because most of them don't get used for high mileages.

If a manufacturer really wanted to, I think they could get well into three figures for mpg for a petrol bike. The market just doesn't seem to care.

Edited by kambites on Tuesday 19th October 18:32

SystemParanoia

14,343 posts

222 months

Dr Derek Doctors

8,422 posts

217 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
I may be talking rubbish here but a few years ago a reasonably high up army type told me that the British army were aiming to have diesel motorbikes at some point in the future so that logistically they only had to deal with one type of fuel.

essexplumber

Original Poster:

7,756 posts

197 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
So in answer to my question there are loads of diesel bikes. What factors would make a diesel bike unfavourable when compared to a petrol?

Hugo a Gogo

23,427 posts

257 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
that's exactly what the US army are trying to do (and everyone else in NATO in believe)
have all vehicles able to run on jet fuel basically

SystemParanoia

14,343 posts

222 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
Hugo a Gogo said:
that's exactly what the US army are trying to do (and everyone else in NATO in believe)
have all vehicles able to run on jet fuel basically


sorted smile

Mastodon2

14,167 posts

189 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
essexplumber said:
So in answer to my question there are loads of diesel bikes. What factors would make a diesel bike unfavourable when compared to a petrol?
Slow burning fuel requiring high compression, making them slow to rev and giving them a low redline. Hardly good for hooning and thunderously quick acceleration.

swamp

1,012 posts

213 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
There is a modified Kawasaki diesel bike:

http://www.motorbikestoday.com/features/Articles/d...

I believe NATO are standardised on diesel across the board. No good having army motorbikes if you can't fill them with fuel!

kambites

70,814 posts

245 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
essexplumber said:
So in answer to my question there are loads of diesel bikes. What factors would make a diesel bike unfavourable when compared to a petrol?
I think the real question is why would anyone bother? The characteristics that make turbo-diesels so good for daily drivers in cars are not what you want in a bike. Too much low down torque would be completely wasted on something weighing 200kg and no-one really seems to care about fuel economy or cruising range on a bike.

On the other hand they tend to be heavy; to get any kind of power from a physically small engine you need a bloody great big turbo which is a nightmare to package on a bike and would need to be very carefully insulated since they get so hot. They're a nightmare to start because they're so high compression so you need a (relatively) big battery and starter motor which add yet more weight and bulk to the whole system.


Edited by kambites on Tuesday 19th October 19:02

Hugo a Gogo

23,427 posts

257 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
SystemParanoia said:
Hugo a Gogo said:
that's exactly what the US army are trying to do (and everyone else in NATO in believe)
have all vehicles able to run on jet fuel basically


sorted smile
yes that one can run on Diesel!

maser_spyder

6,356 posts

206 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
Mastodon2 said:
essexplumber said:
So in answer to my question there are loads of diesel bikes. What factors would make a diesel bike unfavourable when compared to a petrol?
Slow burning fuel requiring high compression, making them slow to rev and giving them a low redline. Hardly good for hooning and thunderously quick acceleration.
But surely you've just described a Harley?

crofty1984

16,913 posts

228 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
kambites said:
If a manufacturer really wanted to, I think they could get well into three figures for mpg for a petrol bike. The market just doesn't seem to care.

Edited by kambites on Tuesday 19th October 18:32
Honda CG125 ridden gently must crack that sureley?

kambites

70,814 posts

245 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
crofty1984] said:
Honda CG125 ridden gently must crack that sureley?
I think there are bikes that will do 100mpg, but then there are cars that get close to that and you only have to look at the power to top speed ratio of sports bikes to see that bikes have a lot less drag, despite the rubbish Cd. I think a usable, 300-400mpg petrol bike ought to be perfectly achievable if there was a market for it.

Chris993C4

655 posts

235 months

Tuesday 19th October 2010
quotequote all
Dr Derek Doctors said:
I may be talking rubbish here but a few years ago a reasonably high up army type told me that the British army were aiming to have diesel motorbikes at some point in the future so that logistically they only had to deal with one type of fuel.
Sounds entirely plausible - NATO Common Fuel Policy dictated that British Army Landy 90/100s were diesel, whereas the previous Series IIIs were invariably petrol...