Wait a minute...I asked this question a while back, describing exactly the
same thing and I was told that no, the surging is (as I would imagine the
name implies) you are holding the throttle constant and the revs are
increasing or decreasing. I have that initial hesitation upon gently rolling
on the throttle from low revs and from what I've read this is fairly common
on a lot of FI motorcycles. What happens is you roll the throttle on a
little to where you normally would expect a gentle response, nothing
happens, you roll a fraction more, nothing happens, then a fraction more and
it takes off. Until you get used to the throttle control you often tend to
roll on too quickly after the initial hesitation causing the bike to lunge
forward. I don't consider it to be a significant annoyance now that I'm
familiar with it and I couldn't really imagine anyone getting as bothered
over it as many on the list seem to be, unless it were true "surging". So
what is it?...surging or hesitation?...will someone with bad surging please
describe the symptoms again in detail...

Joe.

-----Original Message-----
From: Burton, Bob [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2001 12:32 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: TPS and FI relationship


What you describe at very low rpms (~2k rpm in my case) rolling on the
throttle (not abruptly however) in very small increments and getting a
bit of "bucking bronco" effect is what I'm calling the surging. It's
only this way on my bike. I have none of this effect rolling off the
throttle or at other rpm ranges, only maintaining a low speed (at a
certain rpm ~2K) or very slight increase into the "surge" rpm. Chain
tension can make it worse as you said. Once lower or higher than the
"surge" rpm mine's fine, it only occurs in the one spot. It's really not
that bad, just annoying when caught in very slow moving traffic, usually
I just upshift a gear to drop the rpms. As RSRBOB has said though there
are many factors, many sensors and settings. Some have recently found
that adjusting the TPS has made it better or moved it to a more
desireable rpm area. If you want to play with the TPS to see what
happens, just measure it before you change it so you can always go back
to the original setting. Try it a bit higher and a bit lower and note
the differences, then adjust it for the best overall effect. That seems
to be what a few have done, but most of them seem to describe a much
worse "bucking bronco" effect on their bikes before adjusting the TPS
than I have on mine. I'll probably leave mine alone since it's not
really that bad, but measure the TPS just for a base line and to have a
record of it.

Bob B.
'93 GTS #340

-----Original Message-----
From: Derek Baylor [ mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2001 11:55 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: TPS and FI relationship


As an owner of one of the more refined '94s, I'd like to know a little
more about this whole surging thing.  Is the surging you describe
present at steady thottle, or during throttle transitions?  My bike
exhibits what I would desribe as "abrupt" throttle response, especially
when rolling on or off the gas at low rmps.  Sometimes this "on-off"
throttle response will lead to a kind of bucking bronco effect as I try
to give it gas smoothly at low speed, but it's also present and
disruptive while cornering at higher speed and rpm.  I'm very careful
about chain tension, I know that a loose chain can exacerbate the
problem.  I've learned to live with this quirk, but would love to see it
gone if possible.  Would messing with my TPS or injector sync. help this
condition, or just leave me open to making it worse?

-Derek
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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