Hi All,
This was my first winter with my 95 KLR 650 so please excuse the
newbie in me. I didn't do much to the KLR to winterize it (except
take the battery out and charge it indoors). I did add gasoline
stabilizer (stabile brand) into the gas tank (although stupid me, i
didnt run the KLR afterwards).
In any case I re-installed the charged battery and with the choke in
the full open (and everyother position) I tried to fire the KLR up
but the engine wouldn't turn over. I tried adding fresh gas but no
luck. I also tried to give it some throttle but still no luck.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance
Big D
exhaust gas analyzer
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- Posts: 1442
- Joined: Tue Jan 21, 2003 7:59 pm
engine won't turn over
By wouldn't turn over do you mean the engine didn't fir up or the starter
didn't turn over? If the former, have you tried a new spark plug?
In a message dated 2003-03-16 6:56:33 PM Pacific Standard Time,
lothar154@... writes:
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]> > In any case I re-installed the charged battery and with the choke in > the full open (and everyother position) I tried to fire the KLR up > but the engine wouldn't turn over. I tried adding fresh gas but no > luck. I also tried to give it some throttle but still no luck. > > Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. > >
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- Posts: 3355
- Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2001 3:37 pm
engine won't turn over
Engine wont turn over or wont start ?
Mine sat all winter too, battery in bike, in unheated garage, plugged
in the little trickle charger once and a while...
Mine just cranked and cranked till the battery was just about dead,
so plugged the little charger back in did a few other things, tried
again.. it wanted to start.. fire once and I would let go of choke
and it would die.. then battery too weak again...
Figured heck with that, hooked up a real battery charger to battery
terminals, switched the charger to manual @ 2 Amp charge for a few
minutes.. then to high setting as I was hitting the starter button..
Fired then, but would only run with choke pulled open as tight as I
dared for a minute or two, got kinda nervious at first she was
smoking pretty hard (blueish color) then it started to clear up,
musta added a bit more Sta-Bil than I needed last fall.
Good luck... I was about ready to bump-start it, but figured I really
dont want to look like a fool in my driveway.
Dooden
--- In DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "donavos" wrote: > Hi All, > > This was my first winter with my 95 KLR 650 so please excuse the > newbie in me. I didn't do much to the KLR to winterize it (except > take the battery out and charge it indoors). I did add gasoline > stabilizer (stabile brand) into the gas tank (although stupid me, i > didnt run the KLR afterwards). > > In any case I re-installed the charged battery and with the choke in > the full open (and everyother position) I tried to fire the KLR up > but the engine wouldn't turn over. I tried adding fresh gas but no > luck. I also tried to give it some throttle but still no luck. > > Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks in advance > > Big D
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- Posts: 2322
- Joined: Thu May 10, 2001 9:41 am
exhaust gas analyzer
For jetting. It can tell you just how rich or lean you are
running at whatever RPM you do the reading at. No guesses,
estimates, or seat-of-the-pants dyno.
Especially with oxygenated gasolines, plugs aren't so easy
to read. Also, it's easy to do plug readings at full
throttle, but is your carb lean or rich at 1/3 throttle, at
4,000rpm? Basically you can see exactly which settings need
to be changed. You could bolt on an aftermarket pipe, and
plot how the jetting is affected by the new pipe.
It would also be a lot quicker, since you wouldn't need to
do a dyno run, then change the jetting and run it again (was
it lean or rich?), then change and run it again..... BTW
when you have a jek kit installed, the shop doesn't do this.
They dyno the bike, then install the jet kit and dyno it
again. There's no fine tuning.
From what I've seen most jet kits and aftermarket carb
setups are definitely set up on the rich side. Rich enough
that there may be a bit of performance to be had by going a
touch leaner.
Devon
A15
Zpokez72@... wrote:
> > Please excuse my ignorance but what exactly would you need an exhaust gas > analyzer for? > Cactus Jack >
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