Yea a 2003 VFR800, a little over 500LBS with 110HP. I really like the bike,
the power is about perfect, but the delivery of it is not so much. It can
put you in a scary situation if your not careful, but it doesn't have so
much power that it surprises you, just don't crank it to the stops in 1st
gear or it will flip upside down. (there is a youtube video of some dumbass)
It has decent torque, but you really need to keep it above 4K, 5k is the
best cruising RPM.  The power doesn't start to really take off until 6K and
when it hits VTEC at 7.5K it feels like you suddenly got a second motor. It
is a little hard to drive in the 30-40 MPH range since it puts you in either
too low of a gear so the bike is snatchy, or you are lugging the engine and
have no power. 50+ is fine, don't think of using 6th gear unless you are
doing over 70 (more like 85+). If you are interested in one get a later
model than mine, the early ones have a particularilly bad fuel
mapping/computer that exacerbates the snatchyness of the throttle and the
VTEC transition, They changed out the computer on the 2005 and later models.
Mine takes some finese with the throttle and clutch when in first gear,
especially downshifting for a really tight turn. It's not a good beginner
bike. Also there is no rebound adjustment on the forks and it really could
use it, so I plan to do what just about every other VFR owner does and get
some gold valves. Things I love about it is it has over 200 mile range, the
power, the handling, the brakes are fantastic, the ergonomics are great
especially for a tall guy like me, the VTEC kick in the pants, and the sound
of that V4 is such sweet music.



On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 10:47 PM, Kurt Nolte <vturbine.po...@gmail.com>wrote:

> Allen: VFR 800cc? Weight? Power?
>
> The huge allure for me to EFI is the "hands off" nature of most EFI setups
> and it's adaptability.
>
> -Kurt
>
> On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 10:44 PM, Allen Thomas <althomas...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> I think the big issue is that people generally don't know how to tune a
>> carb anymore. My almost 30 year old brother has never owned a carburated
>> vehicle. My VFR with its pre and post cat O2 sensors and computer that uses
>> them to dynamically meter fuel during cruise only gets marginally better gas
>> mileage over the 750NH 1-2 MPG which is jetted and tuned for best
>> performance.
>>  On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 10:28 PM, James O'Gorman <aspor...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>
>>> starting a new thread for this one...
>>> So let's say you have a well-tuned carburated engine, then you switch it
>>> to have tuned-port injection (since I would think that would be the most
>>> realistic swap.)
>>>
>>> How would mileage compare?
>>>
>>> I know that FI has some benefits such as on cold-starts, but I'm pretty
>>> sure that 'over all' FI in and of itself only provides marginally better
>>> fuel mileage.
>>>
>>> I know that mileage isn't the only concern when it comes to total
>>> environmental impact, but for the sake of this thread that's all I'm asking
>>> about.
>>>
>>> ...cause I'm not convinced that (well-tuned) carbs versus FI will
>>> make-or-break a mileage comparison.
>>>
>>>
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