I practice a starting regimine very similar to what surfswab just
detailed but my '03 750 takes minutes, not seconds, to be actually
"ride ready".  When it's cold, I turn the choke to full-on and the
bike will start with very little cranking (and no throttle).  I let it
idle at full-choke until the rpm's climb to about 3000, then move it
to half- choke.  The idle speed will drop back down, then slowly climb
up again.  Once the rpm's hit around 2500 a second time the bike is
ready to go.  I've never timed it, but I would say the whole process
takes 5 to 7 minutes.  But that's also about how long it takes me to
get my riding gear on and the gates opened at my house, so when I'm
ready the bike is.  It seems that anything less causes the bike to
barely want to move.  If you drop it into first and give it throttle,
the engine sounds like it's about to stall out when you start to let
the clutch out.  I may be wrong, but I thought this was just a
characteristic of the Nighthawks.  I've got less than 4K miles on it,
and otherwise it runs well.

- mhillard
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