perryboy23 wrote:Being a biker for the last ten years i have had a few bikes and without sounding like a total prick when starting a bike I have always pushed the ignition switch and gave a little on the throttle and in cold weather a lot on the throttle. Give it a few revs and hey presto your ready to go.
After a breif bollocking from Paul the engineer at the MZ deaalers in Milton Keynes, this is not somthing the 1000's like.
apparently if you start opening the throttle whilst pushing the ignition switch it confuses the bikes sensors thus the problems ive been having with starting the bike up on cold english mornings.
Switch only is the way forward!! works everytime.
With the advent of Fuel Injection, the old rules don't always apply. The designers of the FI seem to think about how it should be used, not how it
would be used!
Your FI system should also have an automatic choke, so when the engine is cold it will enrichen the fuel mixture until the engine is warmed up.
It's worthwhile to learn about the ins-and-outs of the system, as you have found. I had a Triumph Daytona with FI, and its quirk was with shutdown. I've been trained that in order to shut off a bike, you hit the killswitch then turn the key. This trains your mind to behave in a similar manner when in a panic situation where engine shutoff is required. However, as it turns out, the on-board computer in the Triumph could potentially fail due to current surge (very rare, but it has happened to others). Their procedure was to shutoff with the key, always!
Relax. You'll live longer.