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<Rhino>
25th June 2008, 19:26
I have a Hyosung GV250 and find that in the morning when the bike is cold it is very hard to start.

What happens: I press the starter and it just sort of spits and hisses but dosn't seem to want to fire, if I add a small twist of the accelerator it doesn't even spit or hiss it just sounds like it flooded and does nothing! release the accelerator and try again: spits and hisses etc, eventually it fires a bit then stops and after a couple of minutes of trying it might fire and if I very very gently twist the accelerator it will rev but if I twist too much it will die, when it re-starts it sounds deeper like its flooded and will eventually fire and rev away as normal.

If I put the choke on it just wont go at all, like its flooded??

I'm new to this so any help or advice will be greatly apprieceated

Thanks in advance :2thumbsup

R

Gubb
25th June 2008, 19:52
Use the choke on the first start, leave it for a little while, while slowly sliding the choke back until you hit normal idling range.

Just gotta let her warm up.

BiK3RChiK
25th June 2008, 21:36
Use the choke. If that doesn't help, take it into the dealer early in the morning and say you are having problems starting it from cold and explain the problem... They will almost certainly have a solution for you.

Wannabiker
26th June 2008, 02:16
the technique is to crank it first without the choke...it will cough and die. Then apply the choke and crank again. This should stir some life into it. If that doesnt work...then off to the workshop!

CookMySock
26th June 2008, 08:00
stop trying to start it - something is wrong. You will damage the starter before long - it is just not constructed to handle that sort of treatment. Take it to the shop and leave it there overnight so they can start it from dead cold and see the problem for themselves.


DB

Radar
26th June 2008, 09:27
How many km's has your bike done, and how long has it been since a service? Last time the spark plugs and air filter were checked?

CB ARGH
26th June 2008, 09:49
This definately doesn't sound good. Like DB says above, get it checked out professionally. You don't want to have to fork out for new parts.

xwhatsit
26th June 2008, 12:39
It's just cranking the engine, how is that supposed to hurt the starter? It's doing exactly what it's designed for. You'll get a flat battery in a hurry though.

How good is the battery? Cold weather like this it's hard work starting an engine; if your battery is slightly shit then you'll have enough juice to crank it but not enough to give you a really good fat spark. Might need to refine that choke technique too, every engine likes something different. Shouldn't need any throttle starting, four-strokes don't normally like throttle when starting.

<Rhino>
26th June 2008, 13:44
Thanks for the replies.

I don't know when it was last serviced as I have just bought it privately, actually I need to ask that don't I.

This morning I used used choke only, no cranking of the handle and it kicked over after 3 bursts on the starter. Heap better and far less cranking than is has been.

xwhatsit
26th June 2008, 15:20
This morning I used used choke only, no cranking of the handle and it kicked over after 3 bursts on the starter. Heap better and far less cranking than is has been.
Hopefully that's just it :D

At some point, grab a multimeter and tell us how much voltage the battery has got. Throw a couple of spark plugs at her too, can't hurt, most plugs are about $6 each and there's only two pots.

Edit: LOL -- your name is giving the quote mechanism the shits. Thinks it's an HTML tag :laugh:

CookMySock
26th June 2008, 22:15
It's just cranking the engine, how is that supposed to hurt the starter? It's doing exactly what it's designed for.nah you can't run a starter continuously for two minutes. Well, you can, but it won't last for long. Starters are meant to run for a few seconds maximum and then they last for years and years.



This morning I used used choke only, no cranking of the handle and it kicked over after 3 bursts on the starter. Heap better and far less cranking than is has been.From dead-cold with the choke on full, and a very small opening on the throttle, it should start in a second or two. If it hasn't been run in a week it might take 3-4 seconds.

If you are still struggling with it, get an old hand to show you.


DB

breakaway
27th June 2008, 00:24
There is a trick to starting every bike. Get to know yours, and you'll get it to go first time, every time.

CookMySock
27th June 2008, 09:10
LOL -- your name is giving the quote mechanism the shits. Thinks it's an HTML tag :laugh:haha, what about an SQL injection nick ? :laugh:

DB

<Rhino>
2nd July 2008, 11:51
From dead-cold with the choke on full, and a very small opening on the throttle, it should start in a second or two. If it hasn't been run in a week it might take 3-4 seconds.

If you are still struggling with it, get an old hand to show youDB

Thanks DB, tried this and it works a treat, that simple. :done:

CookMySock
2nd July 2008, 14:12
good shit, bro. :rockon:

DB