Geezer
Parsimonious Curmudgeon
Open the cap slowly and release the pressure. You will still hear the gas boiling but it won't jump out at you.
Gasoline is a mixture of a large number of hydrocarbon compounds. It has a boiling range that starts as low as 90-95 °F and the boiling point will rise to something like 400 °F as the more volatile components go off. Under the pressure of the tank, the boiling point rises (higher BP at higher pressure). When the pressure is released (and the fuel temperature is greater than the BP), it will certainly boil and possibly erupt. No question that the temperature of the gasoline will exceed the BP on a warm day; especially on a Gen I without an added heat blanket.Hard to imagine that the fuel was actually boiling. Vapor pressure may be the culprit. The vapor pressure of the gas at elevated temperatures can cause an increase in the pressure inside the tank at temperatures WAY below the boiling point.
No, the Gen 2 does not return fuel to the tank....I'm convinced part of the problem is that fuel is pumped from the fuel tank to the injectors and back into the tank after its cooked by the engine. Is that the case on subsequent generations as well?...
Software. No matter what you do to change the Gen I fuel injection, it would take a new FI program and Mama Yamaha isn't sharing the code.Interesting...If so, what would be involved in a retrofit? Pump, fuel pipe, injectors....
Absolutely! Upgrade to a GEN II (08 or newer) and never look back...Is the Gen 2 cooler than Gen 1?
Fixed it for you.Absolutely! Upgrade to a GEN III (Is the Gen 2 cooler than Gen 1?0813 or newer) and never look back...
--G
The Gen I uses a fuel return line from the fuel injector rail to the gas tank for fuel pressure regulation, the Gen II doesn't do this. The fuel return line lets the gas pick up heat from the engine before being returned to the tank. The Gen II comes with a heat blanket between the engine and the gas tank, revised body panels which helps manage heat, different radiator and an apparent corporate intention to design the FJR for better heat management.Doesn't the Gen 2 have the same engine as the Gen 1? If so, what is the difference between this happening to a 1 vs 2? More room between engine & tank maybe?
Apart from the fuel flow bit, the engines are essentially the same, but insulation and airflow are very different, that's where the Gen II scores.Doesn't the Gen 2 have the same engine as the Gen 1? If so, what is the difference between this happening to a 1 vs 2? More room between engine & tank maybe?
Absolutely! Upgrade to a GEN II (08 or newer) and never look back...Is the Gen 2 cooler than Gen 1?
--G
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