Help... Pinging on 95"
#1
Help... Pinging on 95"
Had 95 put in about 2000 miles ago on my 2006 Deluxe. Ran great with no problems. On Friday (first 90 degrees day), I started noticing pinging in 5th gear at about 1/2 throttle. I thought maybe I had some bad gas but just filled the tank with 93 oct. and still have the problem. No pinging prior to Friday. I don't have a tach but tend to ping in 5th gear below 55 mph. Temp never gets hotter than 210 degrees.
SE 95
Stock heads
Andrews 26 g cams
SE A/C
Stock springer dual exhaust
SERT
What direction should take to solve this? It was just dynoed about 1 month ago.[/align]
SE 95
Stock heads
Andrews 26 g cams
SE A/C
Stock springer dual exhaust
SERT
What direction should take to solve this? It was just dynoed about 1 month ago.[/align]
#3
#5
RE: Help... Pinging on 95"
Pinging is caused by heat and pressure. For some reason you have more of one or both. Higher octane fuel will bring up the ambient temp. of the engine. You should use the least amount of octane you can get away with, stay in a rpm range that doesn't ping, and improve the volumetric efficiency of your engine. We have some great performance packages that can help this.
#6
RE: Help... Pinging on 95"
ORIGINAL: Kingofcubes
Pinging is caused by heat and pressure. For some reason you have more of one or both. Higher octane fuel will bring up the ambient temp. of the engine. You should use the least amount of octane you can get away with, stay in a rpm range that doesn't ping, and improve the volumetric efficiency of your engine. We have some great performance packages that can help this.
Pinging is caused by heat and pressure. For some reason you have more of one or both. Higher octane fuel will bring up the ambient temp. of the engine. You should use the least amount of octane you can get away with, stay in a rpm range that doesn't ping, and improve the volumetric efficiency of your engine. We have some great performance packages that can help this.
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#10
RE: Help... Pinging on 95"
Here is a pretty good write-up on octane, pinging, etc.:
http://www.imoc.co.uk/technical/article/octane.htm#q3
If someone has a better link, please post it. I found this one helpful, especially for its discussion of what we call pinging; it's acutally "autoignition" caused by unburned gases in the cylinder being ignited by heat. Running a tune in your bike set-up for cool weather may be the wrong tune in hot weather because the cylindersheads are getting hotter leading to "autoignition." Your cool weather tune was probably right at that "almost" pinging timing/fuel mixture point, and the hotter weather tipped the balance to pinging. The cure is probably to simply retard the timing one or two degrees where you are getting the pinging or add some fuel to the a/f. Also, higher octane fuel tends to lower cylinder temperatures (thus reducing the chances for pinging) while lower octane fuels tend to raise cylinder temperatures all else being equal. Point is, if you are getting pinging using the recommended octane for your engine, switching to a lower octane fuel will not eliminate pinging, but may tend to aggravate the condition by spreading it to other rpm/load ranges where no pinging currently occurs. HTH.
http://www.imoc.co.uk/technical/article/octane.htm#q3
If someone has a better link, please post it. I found this one helpful, especially for its discussion of what we call pinging; it's acutally "autoignition" caused by unburned gases in the cylinder being ignited by heat. Running a tune in your bike set-up for cool weather may be the wrong tune in hot weather because the cylindersheads are getting hotter leading to "autoignition." Your cool weather tune was probably right at that "almost" pinging timing/fuel mixture point, and the hotter weather tipped the balance to pinging. The cure is probably to simply retard the timing one or two degrees where you are getting the pinging or add some fuel to the a/f. Also, higher octane fuel tends to lower cylinder temperatures (thus reducing the chances for pinging) while lower octane fuels tend to raise cylinder temperatures all else being equal. Point is, if you are getting pinging using the recommended octane for your engine, switching to a lower octane fuel will not eliminate pinging, but may tend to aggravate the condition by spreading it to other rpm/load ranges where no pinging currently occurs. HTH.