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Thread: Newbie's Hornet 250 won't fire up. HELP!

  1. #1
    Join Date
    12th June 2008 - 19:11
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    Unhappy Newbie's Hornet 250 won't fire up. HELP!

    I've recently got a '96 Hornet & she defiantly won't start.

    The firtst time this happened, I pushed the bike over to Mt Eden Motorcycles and had the spark plugs replaced and a lesson on how to use the choke and how to start the bike up... as well as a new inline fuel filter....

    This is the 2nd time round now that i've had this problem in the 2 weeks that i've owned the bike....

    She's been on the side stand since Monday because i didn't want to ride in crap weather and now on Thursday afternoon she won't fire up, i also may have run the battery down ....

    what am i doing wrong?

    Is the engine flooded?

    How can i stop this from happening again?

  2. #2
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    14th February 2006 - 08:20
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    kill switch? have you tried push starting it? or hook it up to a car battery (with car engine off) and see if it will start....did Mt Eden say the plugs were replaced because you fouled the plugs and was the engine flooded? Why was the fuel filter replaced?- loads of crap clogging it?
    Don't just live to ride but ride to live.

  3. #3
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    19th August 2007 - 00:07
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    this is why i hate talking bikes to shops

    left it for a few days and won't start?

    shop replaced plugs and fuel filter and still have problems?

    crappy weather?

    you, my friend, probably have water in your tank.

    either drain the carbies (very easy), add a dash of meths to your fuel to suck up the water, or flatten the battery trying to pump out the water.

    in the future maybe turn the fuel off when you leave the bike to stop water collecting in the carbies. when you go to ride, shake it up a bit first and/or drain the carby "just in case". i always had to do this every monday morning to my fxr back when i had my L plate cause i didn't ride it on weekends and water coalesced and collected in the carby

    parking your bike outside where it gets rain/dew is a REALLY good way to get this problem too

    are you using ethanol blend fuel? always filling at the same station? ethanol is hydrophillic, drawing water from the air into your fuel, and some stations have crappy tanks which leak petrol into the soil and water into the tanks (i find mobil is shocking for this)

  4. #4
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    19th November 2007 - 13:11
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    Hit it with a hammer. :-)

    Just kidding above post be the way to go.. Check for water..
    " yah trick yah "


  5. #5
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    14th February 2006 - 08:20
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    Quote Originally Posted by motorbyclist View Post
    and some stations have crappy tanks which leak petrol into the soil and water into the tanks (i find mobil is shocking for this)
    Mobil better not be the one I use...
    Don't just live to ride but ride to live.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    16th July 2006 - 16:44
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    In case the carb needle(s) are shagged or the o-rings around them and the bike is leaking fuel and flooding, did you try switching off your fuel tap when not using the bike (as we discussed)?
    Having trouble behaving on your bike? www.Ride2Die.com

  7. #7
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    10th September 2005 - 10:47
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    Its probably something simple if it was running fine not very long ago.

    Battery would be my first bet, definitly try starting it connected with jump leads to a car or something.

    When a battery is kind of flat it might have enough power to turn the engine over, but turning the engine over draws a lot of juice from the battery so there is less juice left to make a spark to ignite the fuel/air mix inside your engine. So the bike becomes hard to start or won't even start at all because of a weak spark.

    Stefan

  8. #8
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    19th August 2007 - 00:07
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    is it going now?

  9. #9
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    22nd July 2006 - 11:59
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    Oh noes! A poor little ol'hornet not starting right? If'n you haven't got it sorted, give me a PM and I'll see what can be done to get it buzzing right again!
    "I like to ride anyplace, anywhere, any time, any way!"

  10. #10
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    7th October 2007 - 16:57
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    Hmm. I'm getting a similar problem with my little ol' Hornet. It's parked in the garage overnight so no problems starting in the morning, but after being parked outside in the rain and cold all day at work it's a complete bitch to start. Tried turning fuel off, makes no difference. It just turns over and over for a few minutes with the choke out (then back in or it floods), give a few twists of the throttle and eventually we get there.

    Any ideas?

  11. #11
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    5th March 2007 - 18:08
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    What happens if you try to roll start it? (2nd gear, kill switch set to 'Run', all lights etc turned off if possible, push it, when you get up to about jogging speed, dump the clutch, be ready to pull it back in if it starts / wheel locks!)

  12. #12
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    19th August 2007 - 00:07
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    really that's less than an ideal solution....

  13. #13
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    5th March 2007 - 18:08
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    I think it's an important elimination / troubleshooting step:

    Quote Originally Posted by wildpudding View Post
    When a battery is kind of flat it might have enough power to turn the engine over, but turning the engine over draws a lot of juice from the battery so there is less juice left to make a spark to ignite the fuel/air mix inside your engine. So the bike becomes hard to start or won't even start at all because of a weak spark.
    Besides, if it doesn't work you loose nothing (except maybe a few minutes of your life )

  14. #14
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    19th August 2007 - 00:07
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    oh right, i somehow thought you meant it as a solution to the problem, which it obviously isn't

  15. #15
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    7th October 2007 - 16:57
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    Quote Originally Posted by andy_r View Post
    Hmm. I'm getting a similar problem with my little ol' Hornet. It's parked in the garage overnight so no problems starting in the morning, but after being parked outside in the rain and cold all day at work it's a complete bitch to start. Tried turning fuel off, makes no difference. It just turns over and over for a few minutes with the choke out (then back in or it floods), give a few twists of the throttle and eventually we get there.

    Any ideas?
    It has also recently had a 5,000km service, so new plugs etc. Apart from this it runs absolutely sweet.

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