I cant remember from the ads what sort of figure they were quoting but it was a very small MPG gain from a tankful, and I thought that's another gimmick for Shell then. A few lads I know will only pit the optimax stuff in, but again there isn't all that more mileage to gain. Haven't heard whether it has any rumour that its bad for an engine though.
I have heard that some engines are tuned for 95 octane, all the stuff like optimax etc is 98+ octane. I doubt it'll damage the engine but it might not be as efficient though.
I can't tell the differance in the fazer but the Tuono realy likes the higher octane stuff. I think it helps the burn on large capacity cylinders.
Not heard it's bad for m\c engines
None fuel injected bike will see a small power increase at sea level but normal Bhp at high altitudes if they are on high octane fuels but fuel injected bikes will not as they will alter themselves to suit and will stay constant with Bhp.....and before anyone says yes but i've had this done and that done....what i have written will only apply if the bike is standard with no KN's or race cans.
If you want to save fuel run the bike standard with it's emission flat spot.....as soon as you start to alter any part of the standard set up the bike will do less on MPG.
And don't use octane boosters as they don't work...fact.
<!--6e052d28b1806771e2d163a041d4a5d4-->OK been making some enquiries about this, and the consencus seems to be that it is unlikely to do your bike any harm, but on the other hand it is unlikely to make any difference to your MPG or power output, so at the end of the day is there any point in paying more for something that is only going to do the same as the cheaper stuff.
<!--6e052d28b1806771e2d163a041d4a5d4-->Bit more info from their own website, turns out its just the new name for their regular fuel. They claim that it will give you an extra litre (yes thats 1 litre from a tank full. Remember that that is a cars fuel tank which probably holds about 40 litres at an average so theyre not talking huge differences here.
I don't think modern bikes will suffer. There has been some cause for concern in the classic world, as those who have lined their tanks have found that the lining has been taken of by the ethanol in the modern fuel. From what I can gather ethanol is the green stuff they can put in petrol up to 10%. A lot modern engine systems will also compensate for higher octane fuel resulting in no noticeable affect, but is alleged that it contains better additives.