HotRodZilla
GOD BLESS AMERICA
They won't do it every time. I got away with it for a couple years. Then one day...That's what I get for tempting fate. Lol.
Just keep trying. If you have the ability, you can pull the plugs to try to speed drying, or just keep hitting the starter until it fires. It will fire and it will happen, if even rarely. My '07 has only ever done it once. I thought I was immune 'cuz I used to fire it all the time to move it in and out of the garage and it never had a problem, until it did. It worried me at first, but it fired using the WFO techinque.Bought an '04 3 years ago with 53K miles. Just turned 174K last Sunday.Went to ride tonite, thumbed the starter, thought i heard it hit and let off the starter. Would not fire at all...starter seems fast. Tried WFO open for maybe 5-6 seconds one time. Let it sit 2.5 hours.....tried again..same fast starter.....did not try WFO. Reminds me of the old RX7's...you never started one just to pull it out of the garage to wash it !! Bike obviously does NOT sit. Bike has always run great...mountain riding every weekend ! Never happend before. I suspect it's the RX7 syndrome....VERY flooded...Any other suggestons/thoughts ???
While I have not pulled the plugs before during the condition..if it were a case of flooding....you'd smell large amounts of unburned fuel coming out of the exhaust pipe and I never have. I've had a variety of experience of flooded engines over the years via dirt bike and snowmobile....and this just doesn't seem like a case of too much fuel to me. I think the ring freeze theory is more likely.Has anyone tried removing and inspecting spark plugs during fast starter syndrome? In case of leaking injectors root cause - a simple drying of the spark plugs would solve the problem. Of course, that is not a permanent solution but at least it would confirm the leaking injectors theory...
Ooops - you are right. In one case when it happened to me I checked the exhausts and no excessive gas smell. Though I never took the time to remove the spark-plugs when it occured. I simply let the bike roll on the valley in front of the yard where I keep it during winter and go for the "push-start" in second gear. Each spring after 1-3 months of winter storage it occurs on my bike and the "push-start" method always work, saving my battery and starter from huge effort of start after fast starter syndrome.While I have not pulled the plugs before during the condition..if it were a case of flooding....you'd smell large amounts of unburned fuel coming out of the exhaust pipe and I never have. I've had a variety of experience of flooded engines over the years via dirt bike and snowmobile....and this just doesn't seem like a case of too much fuel to me. I think the ring freeze theory is more likely.Has anyone tried removing and inspecting spark plugs during fast starter syndrome? In case of leaking injectors root cause - a simple drying of the spark plugs would solve the problem. Of course, that is not a permanent solution but at least it would confirm the leaking injectors theory...
In my case after bike storage longer than 3 weeks it always has the fast starter syndrome. After first cranking when I notice the symptoms I start the bike "push-start" method letting it roll to the valley and release the clutch in second. So I save all the cranking and additional flood. The next time it hapens i'll try to remove the spark plugs and see if they are realy wet only from the gas which leaked through the injectors during longer storage...I pulled the plugs and was met with wet plugs and a fuel fog on turn over (pump unplugged of course). I only had the one occurrence and didnt know it was a documented cronic quirk at the time. So that extra fuel might have been operator induced flooding from attempted starts.
I started successfully the bike today after almost 5 months of winter storage in the garage (last trip on 01.11.2014). In the last 4-5 years it was a known fact that in spring it will definitely develop the FSS: at first start attempt it almost starts (it even puts the front lights on as if the engine successfully started), then it dies and at next attempts it cranks fast with no firing sounds...This weekend I managed to start the bike after 4 weeks in the garage; in previous cases after 2-max 3 weeks in the garage it was developing the fast starter syndrome.My bike's behaviour in similar situations was that the first starter button push was cranking the engine at normal speed, the engine was "almost" starting for half a second and then immediatelly died (it even puts the front lights on) and all the next attempts involved fast starter speed with no success in starting. Trying to bypass this, this time I pushed the starter button just a little shorter (around one second maybe) than it usually takes to start a cold engine; with 10 seconds pause (for battery recovery etc) I repeated this (every time ignition off and on) for 4 times. At every short push on starter it was cranking at the normal speed. At the 5th attempt I let it crank a little longer (2 - max 3 seconds) and it started successfully!It's the first victory in my case against the fast starter syndrome; I'll try the same method in spring when I put the bike again "in production" and if the method works again I'm pretty sure the issue is related to some wrong setting in the ECU related to cold start etc. We'll see...
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