Carrying Extra Fuel...



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Thread: Carrying Extra Fuel...

  1. #1

    Carrying Extra Fuel...

    So my new bike doesn't take me as far on a tank as I'd like, especially for multi day trips. Anyone have any suggestions on what sort of canister to use and how to secure it? I was thinking of attaching something to the outside of a tail bag rather than storing it inside one.. The bike is an 09 Triumph Bonneville by the way, so I basically have a flat passenger seat to work with storage wise.

    I was looking into one of these (or similar):

    http://www.motorcycle-superstore.com...l-Pack-Jr.aspx

    Any other suggestions or input would be appreciated. Thanks!

  2. #2
    zeniceguy's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    rear gear

  3. #3
    matthew's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Well-weathered leather
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  4. #4
    Rotten_Ronnie's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    I rode 8,000 kilometers with a 5 litre can strapped onto my bike.

    Ask Wheelieboy about his Cbr600 ride to California and back, I believe he had his set up on a passenger peg.

    Speaking of which, there is a gas can holder you can mount to a passenger peg to hold a can. It precludes carrying passengers, but might be just the ticket.

    What is your tank range?


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  5. #5

    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...



    ON really long trips I put a milkcrate that holds two cans.

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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Heres a better option....http://www.tourtank.com/

  7. #7
    Rotten_Ronnie's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...



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  8. #8

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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Hey, that's where I have my cup holder mounted. They stole my mounting idea, lol.
    2009 Candy Plasma Blue Ninja 650R (has a cup holder)|Mods: Passenger foot peg flip up cup holder; ER6N grab bars; Grab bar sliders; Woodcraft swingarm spools; '09 fairing vibe fix; Thick weather stripping under seat; SportBars; Ninja650Shop.com no-cut sliders.|Upcoming: Fork sliders; Extended swingarm spools; Bar-end mirrors; HIDs with projectors.
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  9. #9

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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    I've seen people recommend the camping fuel canisters for this purpose but I emailed the manufacturer and they said the containers should be fine to carry fuel in for a little while but after extended periods the gasoline will start to eat the inside of the bottle and that they were not officially approved for gasoline transport.
    2009 Candy Plasma Blue Ninja 650R (has a cup holder)|Mods: Passenger foot peg flip up cup holder; ER6N grab bars; Grab bar sliders; Woodcraft swingarm spools; '09 fairing vibe fix; Thick weather stripping under seat; SportBars; Ninja650Shop.com no-cut sliders.|Upcoming: Fork sliders; Extended swingarm spools; Bar-end mirrors; HIDs with projectors.
    1987 Red Porsche 944 N/A (no cup holder)|Stock.
    1997 Black SAAB 900 SE 2.0 Turbo (1 cup holder)|Stock.

  10. #10
    stevie t's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    I could see some serious leg injuries in a crash with that plate behind your leg...but mind you, probably no worse than the giant metal box behind it.

    "I never set out to be weird. It was always other people who called me weird." FZ

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  11. #11
    Rotten_Ronnie's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Quote Originally Posted by stevie t View Post
    I could see some serious leg injuries in a crash with that plate behind your leg...but mind you, probably no worse than the giant metal box behind it.
    Exactly. The first injury I ever had with my KLR and it's ammo cans, was to strike my ankle against the can as I took off on loose surface, which is exactly what my buddy Dan found on his maiden dirt voyage with hard cases.

    You have to be mindful, but I doubt he'd experience the same conditions on a Bonneville, and of course, he'd have to adapt the bracket or design and build one of his own.

    I was going to carry fuel bottles like these for camp fuel and possibly extra gasoline with me on the Trans Labrador Highway with me this past summer...

    When I realized that camp fuel comes in pressurized 1 litre containers, and that gasoline could be easily carried in CSA approved gas cans. Doh. I now use the four containers I bought for water in the work truck.




    Here's Wheelieboy's method... from his blog: http://supersporttouring.blogspot.ca/


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  12. #12
    Rotten_Ronnie's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Quote Originally Posted by zeniceguy View Post
    rear gear
    This wasn't what you had in mind, was it? Google seemed pretty sure of itself.



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  13. #13

    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Those passenger peg things look awesome!

  14. #14
    Rotten_Ronnie's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Quote Originally Posted by mac_135 View Post
    Those passenger peg things look awesome!
    You can probably buy a footpeg and some sheet aluminium and cobble one of your own together fairly easily. I didn't see "Bonneville" listed there.

    What is the fuel range that you're worried about? What trip did you have in mind?


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  15. #15
    N3WMAN's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    If you get more than 170km to a tank, you're doing better than me.
    Quote Originally Posted by Amazon
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    2006 ZX-6R PART OUT

  16. #16
    budgetracing's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Royal Distributing near GP has the one you posted in stock. I just bought it today. It seems much better than the jerry can/Bungee method and looks much nicer. It was $40 for the can and $20 for the plain mount. $40 if you want the L-bracket/mount.
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  17. #17
    RockerGuy's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Quote Originally Posted by Rotten_Ronnie View Post
    I rode 8,000 kilometers with a 5 litre can strapped onto my bike.

    Ask Wheelieboy about his Cbr600 ride to California and back, I believe he had his set up on a passenger peg.

    Speaking of which, there is a gas can holder you can mount to a passenger peg to hold a can. It precludes carrying passengers, but might be just the ticket.

    What is your tank range?
    I cringe when I see that tank hanging.

    Love the Peg idea, wonder if that can fit on a sport bike, lol
    Resident Loudmouth






  18. #18
    tat2's Avatar
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    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Another solution
    http://www.rotopax.com/

    I did the 5L jerry can ziptied to the top pf my ammo can side cases to the TLH last summer.
    Chris
    Stoney Creek
    2008 KLR650+

  19. #19

    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Quote Originally Posted by Rotten_Ronnie View Post
    You can probably buy a footpeg and some sheet aluminium and cobble one of your own together fairly easily. I didn't see "Bonneville" listed there.

    What is the fuel range that you're worried about? What trip did you have in mind?
    Well I'd love to be able to run 300km without stopping (buddy rides a vstrom) - Did it on my z750 a few times (averaged about 260 on a tank though) and the Bonneville seems to go a little less than that (smaller tank so it's expected). It's almost more of a mental thing because the low fuel light comes on really early on this bike. I don't have any specific trip in mind yet, but I love wandering off and not having to worry that I'll end up in the middle of nowhere with every gas station being closed (it's almost happened). Been thinking of doing a run down the Blue Ridge Parkway as my next big one.

  20. #20

    Re: Carrying Extra Fuel...

    Quote Originally Posted by budgetracing View Post
    Royal Distributing near GP has the one you posted in stock. I just bought it today. It seems much better than the jerry can/Bungee method and looks much nicer. It was $40 for the can and $20 for the plain mount. $40 if you want the L-bracket/mount.
    Good to know! Might head up there. Thanks.

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