A lot has been said about the fuel consumption of the C14 and many other bikes but, as someone pointed out, it's pretty simple, really: when it's running low, put more and go back to enjoy driving this wonderful machine. Not much to think about it.
That said, I keep a track of the fuel consumption of my bike and I came to know that the board computer lies by about 1.5 or 2 mpg. That is, when the bike is doing 40 mpg, computer will show 42. I did this on short trips, long trips (several thousand miles), hot or cold weather. Solo or with girlfriend and luggage. Results are around the same.
Now I have the PCV and flies out, and the consumption dropped by about 2 mpg according to my notes, but the computer says that the drop has been an extra 3 mpg, that is, now it is lying a lot, by 5 mpg.
My scarce knowledge is telling me that the computer calculates the amount of fuel being used by the signal that the ECU sends to the injectors, not what they actually inject, which is altered by the PCV. Hence, since the flies are off there is more air (and fuel, as dictated by the PCV) coming in to the engine at the usual RPMs (3000-5000) than what the ECU thinks.
Is this plausible?
I really think that the programmers at Kawasaki did a lousy job on the mpg calculation. As an example, if you turn off the engine and coast down a hill the display still shows 2.5 lt/100 km (sorry, I'm in Europe, but it equals about 94 mpg!!!), which is still a lot if the engine is actually off.
All in all, I'm really happy driving fly-less and the 1400 cc that I paid for are now there off the line, not just above 6000 rpm. The bike is more responsive, more direct to my right hand. I need less input to get her moving and she reacts quicker. Now I just have to tune that map to polish, if possible, the off-on throttle response and I'll be satisfied.