by Bill Jurgenson » Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:56 am
my question: is cold starting the problem or starting after not having run a few days, more than two?
Starting in the cold has never ever been a problem with the XTZ engine. I have three of them and once had 4 at one time. The SZR is completely stock and never opened or cleaned (saving oil changes and filters of course) to my knowledge. Admittedly, continental winters ain't what they used to be and nowhere near as severe as in the northern US, but the Yamaha starts all year round and needs the choke only for about 30 seconds after. I twist the grip twice (accelerator pump), pull the choke and press the button, no gas until it starts. Maybe not after the first turn but quickly enuf. The MZs all have dual Mikuni flatslides and start easily.
BUT
If the beast has been standing unused for more than two days, it is a bitch to put it mildly.
There are several possible causes.
-Water in the gas tank; this is definitely a problem for bikes that stand outside uncovered or were used in heavy rain. Drain the tank entirely, including the that screw cap on the bottom of the petcock. Then drain the floatchamber - yes it is that large hex screw on the left carb half. The right half has no float, just a bowl that gets its gas thru that small rubber tube connecting the two. This works fine except for sidecar units where right turns tend to starve the right bowl.
-old gas. The content of the chamber is not very much. The chamber is vented, so the volatile parts of the gas evaporate easily when the bike left standing, leaving something approaching thin diesel oil with time. This is not easy to burn. On the Skorpion, closing the petcock and letting the thing run dry tends to help. That way, the floatchamber is flooded with fresh gas when the petcock is opened. Obviously this is no help where a fuel pump is installed and, in the case of the SZR, there is no petcock to shut off - or rather the one there can only be reached for service when the tank is being removed.
-the vacuum operated fuel pump. If you are talking Skorpion, throw out the fuel pump entirely. The SZR needs a pump as did the XTZ and I think the Baggi, too, 'cause the petcock is lower than the floatvalve. If the tank is full, it's alright, but nearing empty, the gas no longer flows by gravity. The Skorpion tank is much higher than the carb. The Skorpion only has a fuel pump cause MZ order the XTZ engine as is or perhaps could only get it from Yamaha that way. Anyway, the pump is a membrane pump that acts on the intake vacuum, so that means it pulses and doe this only once every other turn around. When the system has drained, which happens when it has been standing, it takes a lot of turns to get anything back to the carb. That is the reason why Belgarda (they actually built the SZR, not Yamaha, and they build the MT03, too; this is not a Yamaha development) put an electric fuel pump (same one as on the FZR) on the the later SZRs.
- use a hotter plug in the winter, a DPR8 or even a DPR7 if you actually tend to drive US style. Personally, I never use the recommended DPR9xxx anytime of the year. Colder plugs tend to foul more easily. Be sure the outside of the plug is clean and dry. It is a good idea to use a bit of electric terminal grease on the plug connector threads.
- Use a decent battery.
- Before you run down the battery, use a cold start spray. On the Skorpion, just pull off the crankcase vent tube at the bottom of the airbox and spray into there. I am not a Baggi user, but there will be a comparable place on that airbox, too. Or just thru the airfilter if that is easily gotten to. On the SZR, you have to unscrew the tank to get to the airbox nozzle.