what about the bike taking off too slow? Do any off you guys have that issue
and is that normal
or is it just me? ;-) maybe I should be taking off in 2nd gear more??



On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 11:08 AM, Javier Garcia <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> I also have a very similar starting process on my '96 750. I haven't take
> the times, but I don't think it takes me 5-7 min, but much less than that.
> In fact, for morning temperatures above 70F, I do not need choke at all the
> first 5 seconds: it does start right away, but after few seconds the rpm's
> keep going down and if I let go it will stall. So I just give about half
> choke to keep the rpm's stable and that is.
> Now in past few days I can't do this anymore since morning temps are
> getting a little bit below 70F (I guess the same where you are Matt).
> However, I still use half choke to start, and for the time I put my helmet
> and gloves on it is ready for rock n' roll.
>
> Javier.
>
>
> On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 8:43 AM, Graham Rogers <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Mine's about the same ('02 750).  I start it the same way - full
>> choke, no throttle, it starts at the touch of the button.  When revs
>> climb to about 3k I start dropping the choke back till it idles
>> without the choke (about 5 to 7 minutes) and then I can go.  Even
>> then I may have to give it a little choke for the first mile or two
>> unless I'm going straight out onto the open road.
>> Mine is never ready from cold within seconds.  My 700 is however,
>> very different,  Graham
>>
>> On Sep 10, 2009, at 8:26 AM, mhillard wrote:
>>
>> >
>> > 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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