Update...It seems to fire up better with the following
Full choke
Just a tad retarded from full advance
No priming kicks
The briefest of tickles or none at all
Find TDC
Take it just over TDC with lifter
Close lifter and kick - no throttle
Not quite there yet. I shall persevere. I have a feeling that I was flooding it beforehand so I don't think giving it more fuel will be beneficial. The carb does indeed slope down towards the engine so perhaps more prone to flooding than normal?
VB600 starting issues
Re: VB600 starting issues
Further update
No choke
Just a tad retarded
Take it just over TDC with lifter
No tickle, no throttle.
Close lifter and kick
Simple.... It has now fired up 4 times from 4 first kick from cold. I was clearly over-thinking things! Probably comes from having a Velo - whose starting procedure is a little more complex.
No choke
Just a tad retarded
Take it just over TDC with lifter
No tickle, no throttle.
Close lifter and kick
Simple.... It has now fired up 4 times from 4 first kick from cold. I was clearly over-thinking things! Probably comes from having a Velo - whose starting procedure is a little more complex.
-
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Tue Sep 12, 2017 9:50 am
- Location: East Yorkshire
- Contact:
Re: VB600 starting issues
That sounds very much like my experience with Ariel singles Glad you've found the knack. Of course, the next bike will be completely different
Steve
Steve
-
- Holder of a Nylon Anorak
- Posts: 274
- Joined: Fri Jun 08, 2018 3:58 am
- Location: Methven, New Zealand
- Contact:
Re: VB600 starting issues
My VB is very susceptible to flooding. From cold I never used the choke. I give it 30 seconds or so to fill the float chamber, a couple of dabs of the tickler and watch for the very first sign of petrol which appears at the banjo thread, then turn the fuel off (in case of back fire). No priming kick, take over tdc, 1/3 ish retarded, then give it a long swinging kick with a small amount of throttle. Usually fires 1st kick.
Re: VB600 starting issues
Bevan
It does seem that way on mine too. I don't think the downwards sloping carb helps either, nor does the possibility of it leaking - albeit very slightly - at the float valve. I do turn the petcock off after a run for that reason. It is a lovely bike, and there is something deeply honest in its relative simplicity, in the way it seemingly could just chug along all week, and by providing a good dollop of torque when required.
It does seem that way on mine too. I don't think the downwards sloping carb helps either, nor does the possibility of it leaking - albeit very slightly - at the float valve. I do turn the petcock off after a run for that reason. It is a lovely bike, and there is something deeply honest in its relative simplicity, in the way it seemingly could just chug along all week, and by providing a good dollop of torque when required.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests