It's like the feckin blind leading the blind.... haven't got a clue !!
You haven't, have you?!

It's like the feckin blind leading the blind.... haven't got a clue !!

Yet you know better than they. Who'd believe that ?
You sir are an arse.
... and £350 better off for it.

I would agree ish.Ok a question for some of you.
Now I come from a different angle as I do believe the Hilltop "map" does make improvements. I've seen post Hilltop maps that show that. My problem and most peoples problems is the bhp/torque figures which to me discredit it somewhat.
So do you genuinely believe that a 1200lc can make 82 bhp without any obvious issues (6k miles) and makes 107 after the update knowing what you do about how the hilltop map works. ? Also do you think an Aprilia v4 can make 129 and go up 35 in the same way when no one else in the world gets more than 6hp from fueling updates alone or has seen a bike with any less than low 140's in stock trim ?
Now forget whether you like the Hilltop mod in respect of whether you have a nicer bike or they are nice guys, do you believe that is a genuine gain from code that interacts with the oem map. I am a 40 year career electronics/computer engineer so what they claim in terms of map location etc is technically possible.
Just curious as to whether you think the positives outweigh the negatives in your minds despite the bhp figures being mostly fantasy (those 2 examples are not unusual for them) or you just accept it is all as claimed and the rest of the world are just crap at tuning bikes ? I would totally get doing it just because it improves the ride of the bike, I just don't get the blind acceptance of fantasy figures some have.
I would agree ish.
Numbers don't matter, it is how it is delivered.
Take an e600, not that much power weight slightly more than a gsa, doubt off a standing start 0-60 any of us would beat it.
I've seen good rr make 205/6 bhp as standard and poor ones around 180. If you compare your bike in isolation it will feel ok, but a good one against a poor ? It'll get eaten every day of the week.
The Panigale V4s makes similar peak power to my rr now, but I far prefer the rr, more linear in its power delivery and easier/flexible to access.
The truth is 100bhp bmw will equal similarish performance/economy as a 100bhp Yamaha/Suzuki/KTM. It is how it is delivered that counts, and your riding style too. A bike where you can use all the power easily is far nicer to ride than one where you can't.
The peak number matters nowt, it's nothing more than willie waving. Unless your a girl obviously.
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He does indeed; at Northwood and he's FoSM !What is a plausible number in rise of power when tweaking fuel and ignition only? Even if HT guy claims that customers should expect moderate gain on the dyno, the dyno charts are quite optimistic.
Everyone is free to belive whatever they like. I'm not saying that the HT-job does not work. But the boxer runs mainly lean on partial power, while at WOT it gets a richer mixture. This means that the difference in fueling will not be noticed very much when running WOT on the dyno, while a richer midrange will be noticed.
Anyway, back to numbers, and what to expect.
In 2016 Alpha racing launched a new head to the 1200GS LC and showed it at the Intermot. They claim maximum 145 HP on the crank, 134 on rear wheel (not shown on the chart below, but the number is claimed on their website.)
Take a look on their dyno chart:
![]()
Most of the action happens when passing 6K. Their chart is corrected to show the power from the crank, so deduct ~10 Hp.
While below 6K the maximum gain is 5Hp. That is an engine where the heads are modified and fuel system optimized for performance, but stock air filter and can. Above 6K the modified heads are relay starting toy pay off, and that is mainly where the power is rising.
So, tweaking the fuel only, not very much extra should be expected at WOT.
If anyone is willing to belive that Jesus has a brother living north west of London I can only say, feel free….
Let us start at the beginning;73 mpg.....
So if Hilltop is manipulating the figures from a seperate part of the ECU, then where is the ECU getting is MPG figures?
Most certainly not from the Hilltop part.
So all that is bollox
It was trickling along at 50 mph, just shows how you can get a good fuel consumption out of them; two up, both panniers and the givi 58L outback.73 MPG should be 3,2L/100km, that calculates into 620 km range on the 20L GS. 930 km if on the GSA.
I wish you the very best of luck![]()
.Nothing sad about it at all, I do similar.I think the instantaneous fuel consumption figure can be a bit misleading, but the average mpg shown on mine agrees surprisingly well with my own records. Sad person that that I am, I always brim the tank and record odometer reading and litres on the receipt, then enter the numbers into a spreadsheet when I get around to it. This shows my average, over the 11000 miles since new in March 17, as 46.3 mpg and the bike display says 46. I don't see any significant difference between pre and post HT.
Interestingly the average speed is shown as 42.8 mph which I find quite surprising as I do a lot of high speed miles on motorways and dual carriageways where I don't spare the (mechanical) horses. Must be going pretty slow the rest of the time!
Ok a question for some of you.
Now I come from a different angle as I do believe the Hilltop "map" does make improvements. I've seen post Hilltop maps that show that. My problem and most peoples problems is the bhp/torque figures which to me discredit it somewhat.
So do you genuinely believe that a 1200lc can make 82 bhp without any obvious issues (6k miles) and makes 107 after the update knowing what you do about how the hilltop map works. ? Also do you think an Aprilia v4 can make 129 and go up 35 in the same way when no one else in the world gets more than 6hp from fueling updates alone or has seen a bike with any less than low 140's in stock trim ?
Now forget whether you like the Hilltop mod in respect of whether you have a nicer bike or they are nice guys, do you believe that is a genuine gain from code that interacts with the oem map. I am a 40 year career electronics/computer engineer so what they claim in terms of map location etc is technically possible.
Just curious as to whether you think the positives outweigh the negatives in your minds despite the bhp figures being mostly fantasy (those 2 examples are not unusual for them) or you just accept it is all as claimed and the rest of the world are just crap at tuning bikes ? I would totally get doing it just because it improves the ride of the bike, I just don't get the blind acceptance of fantasy figures some have.
I’ve always taken the ‘pre’ figures with a pinch of salt, as I’d imagine that BMW would have a lot of angry customers if a bike claiming to have 125bhp only has 83bhp or whatever it is. Obviously nobody else does either, otherwise BMW would have a lot of lawsuits to deal with.
And the post remap figures? Who cares. It’s not a sportsbike. But it rides much nicer after the remap.