the point is:
the tuners that dont use closed loop for cruising - no matter why they dont - will either use more gas or be very fuel picky. you simply cannot run a open loop engine that is tuned for straight gas on a alcohol blend and have it run right.
so back to the original question - can the type of tuner matter - the answer is an emphatic yes. the BRAND of the tuner and how it works MATTERS to how much fuel is used, and how much mpg you will get.
old bikes that are carbed or run open loop ecm will tune ok with a open loop tuner, however to be safe to operate they need to be rich enough on straight gas that they will run safely on a blend - or dont ever ride where blends are the norm. and expect them to use more gas.
newer bikes using open loop tuners where the o2 is unplugged - have to be tuned the same as if they were a 05 bike - not a 11 bike. a 11 bike will run perfect on any blend of fuel on any given day - thats the point of closed loop. the heat issue revolves around efficiency, the hotter they run the more efficient they run, the less unburned fuel there is, running them a tad richer, but still closed loop will make them a bit cooler but use a bit more gas. vw ran into this in the late 70's and eventually gave up and went water cooled - hence why i think that eventually hd will too.
if premium 93 octane pure gas cost 75cents a gallon and all other costs and wages were the same - then nobody would care at all, but i find myself riding the back roads driving 55 taking a few mins longer, but driving a shorter route and getting 10mpg better milage, less stress, fewer bux.
if you dont care at all how much gas it uses, then a pc tuned to 13 to one will work just fine and still not be too lean with a blend. any tuner device, or tuner person who disables the closed loop at legal speed steady driving will have to lower the mpg to make it run right on blends.
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