Let us know how that works out. The neutral wiring is grounded and that's why 
it always shows N / green light. Let's get into that later. You have multiple 
issues. One at a time. 

--- On Mon, 2/23/09, kiwi <[email protected]> wrote:
From: kiwi <[email protected]>
Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] Re: Nighthawk S starting problem
To: "Nighthawk Motorcycle Lovers!" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, February 23, 2009, 1:16 PM

Blasted those tiny holes that allow the gas through when using the
choke with compressed air and spent 2 hours reinstalling the carbs. It
still took starting fluid to get the bike started BUT, not very much
and the choke worked a little.  I'll see how it starts tomorrow when
it is back to winter temperature.
Second problem with this NH is the neutral/gear indicator.  It reads N
all the time and won't show what gear the bike is in. I found a little
black box under the tail section that I think is part of the N/gear
indicator system.  Is there a way to check it?
Third problem should be simple.  The left front turn signal is
'bright' when ignition is on but will not blink when  it should.  The
others work as they should.  That left one shines a lot brighter than
the right front when ignition is on.

On Feb 22, 11:11 pm, Dennis Hammerl <[email protected]> wrote:
> I will assume your carb clean was a complete operation. Let's examine
how the choke works. The cable opens valves that will permit raw fuel to be
sucked into the motor during cranking. Now, lets say that works fine.Your plugs
should be wet after cranking for a short while. Y-N ? The most common cause of
the plugs being dry after cranking is the throttle plates being open too far and
causing insufficient vacuum. Same as opening the throttle while trying to start.
When the intake air flow is too low, no fuel will be drawn in from the choke
circuit. If the plugs are wet, you're flooding the motor.
> We start here. Additional checks of compression and a leak-down may be in
order.
> This may take time to resolve. Get at it. 
>
> --- On Sun, 2/22/09, Graham Rogers <[email protected]> wrote:
> From: Graham Rogers <[email protected]>
> Subject: [Nighthawk Lovers] Nighthawk S starting problem
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Sunday, February 22, 2009, 6:18 PM
>
> I have a 1986 Nighthawk S.  It ran before I got it but always took  
> starter fluid in the air filter to get it going.  I pulled the carbs  
> and thoroughly cleaned them and used to compressed air in all the  
> holes.  However the bike still will not start without stater fluid  
> and even then it takes along time with the fluid.  I noticed that  
> using the choke seemed to make no difference at all so, thinking that  
> perhaps the choke isn't working at all I removed the carbs again  
> (they are terrible to remove) and did what I could toi ensure the  
> choke was working right.  The mechanism moves as it should and I used  
> compressed air in the holes to the where I presume the choke opens.  
> Now, before I reinstall the carbs, any suggestions?  Could the  
> problem have been the choke or is there something else that would  
> cause the same problem.  By the way, once the bike was warmed up, it  
> ran fine - just when it's cold I have to use starting fluid,  Graham




      
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