Morbid
Reader
8/22/11 10:08 a.m.
The short story is that my XS400 is moody when first take off on it. Pull out of the driveway and onto the street and I have no throttle response, the engine cuts out for half a second then comes back and all but pulls the bike out from underneath me. It only happens on the first acceleration, and only after it's been sitting for several hours.
Through a rather spacey moment on my part, I found a preventative for this little hiccup, but need to know if I'm causing any damage by using it regularly. The other day I started the bike, which has 2 choke positions, one for starting and one for warming up, pushed the choke in one click and put my gear on. When I left, I forgot to push the choke the rest of the way in and it didn't hiccup. Rode about a block with the choke out, noticed that it was idling high, pushed the choke in and it was fine. Still no hiccup.
So, is it safe to make a habit of leaving the choke out until I shift into second, or am I going to cause damage?
Thanks :)
Yes your bike not warm enough to leave yet kind of normal leave the choke out one click at the end of the side street or next stop click it off the rest of the way.
some bikes even had cables to the bars just for this.
44
Mook
New Reader
8/22/11 11:00 a.m.
WAY back when I was the proud owner of my blood red XS400. One of the things I was schooled on by my dealer is that you sould start on full chocke, then moved to half choke until the engine warms up. You can tell the engine warms enough by hearing the idle "run up". I put just over 41k miles on that little bike, the first three years I had it it was my DD rain or shine, hot or cold.
Never missed a beat. I'd buy another on in a skinny minute if I could find one.
Morbid
Reader
8/22/11 2:26 p.m.
OK, so leaving choke out isn't going to hurt anything. Thanks
Woody
SuperDork
8/22/11 2:41 p.m.
That's the way chokes work.
Morbid
Reader
8/22/11 2:42 p.m.
Sorry, my only other carburated vehicle was a dirtbike, still figuring things out
Nope will not hurt a thing except gas mileage if you forget..
Choking most things for a long time will eventually kill them, but not a carb.
Morbid wrote:
OK, so leaving choke out isn't going to hurt anything. Thanks
Well, for short jaunts. Leaving the choke out much past warm-up can cause some nastiness.
Morbid
Reader
8/22/11 8:33 p.m.
Osterkraut wrote:
Morbid wrote:
OK, so leaving choke out isn't going to hurt anything. Thanks
Well, for short jaunts. Leaving the choke out much past warm-up can cause some nastiness.
I'm pushing it back in when I reach the stop sign on my street, about a block away.
Morbid wrote:
Osterkraut wrote:
Morbid wrote:
OK, so leaving choke out isn't going to hurt anything. Thanks
Well, for short jaunts. Leaving the choke out much past warm-up can cause some nastiness.
I'm pushing it back in when I reach the stop sign on my street, about a block away.
That's about what I have to do on my street bike - on cold days, I need to leave the choke on for several blocks.
Woody
SuperDork
8/23/11 10:01 a.m.
Eventually, leaving the choke out would create a lean condition and subsequent overheating of expensive bits, but you would have drivability issues long before that. It's sort of self correcting; you'd notice that something was wrong and then open the choke all the way.
It sounds as if you are riding the bike as it was designed to be ridden.
Huh? How does leaving it choked create a lean condition? The purpose of choking (Brits call it enRICHening) is to feed more fuel. Sure, too much fuel will cause running issues, but not lean.
Or am I confused?
Woody's been eating to many of Bullseye's biscits...
Choke lets in more fuel. On bike carbs it is an secondary air path to draw more vapor up in the the throat. 1 click out is a very small opening and is only effective at slow speeds once the throttle is over 1/4 open no flow though the hole is seen.
If she were leaving with choke fully open then yes she'd have flow at higher throttle openings and would have the potential for carbon fowling the plug and or gas washing the Cly.