I have run the 97 for almost 5 years now. Starting it in the cold has been a problem. Every time I think I have found a workable method, something seems to change. The cold starting issues (20-30 degrees F) have gone away the last several weeks. Turns out the problem was OPERATOR ERROR. I adopted the O-ring between the throttle grip and the bar weight as a throttle lock early on. I now realize that I wasnt closing the throttle the entire way. I turned it to the point just where the free play ended. Evidently that does not close the throttle. Now I make sure to turn the throttle grip all the way and-bang-it fires very quickly with little choke. Life is much better.
Another sad case of OE.
I had a Honda CRM enduro bike with similar habits, could be sat for ages and started no problem as long as you didn't touch the throttle, choke on three kicks away it went.
But try any throttle and boy were you in trouble, best thing to do after that was walk away for a couple of hours :notworthy
funny thing, this Aprilia Starck is the same, "Step away from the throttle..."
hi,I have a Sprint 885 and come in here coz of the basic similarities of the bikes,also I have fitted standard tubular bars with a riser block which sits high like the tiger so have some affinity with the ride position. My bike used to be a right sod to fire up till i found out not to use the throttle and i also turn the lights on for 10 seconds to "warm" the battery as some in the sprint forums say. Sounds mighty weird but it works every time.
Hope you dont mind a Sprinter in here sometimes.
cheers
Dave
ps hey the new Tiger sport doesnt look a million miles away from my bike
Welcome Dave, we're not fussy in here, glad we're helping. I don't own an early Tiger but I used to own a 900 Trident and my mate had your model so I empathize ..
Doesn't the steamer have a special idle circuit on the carbs, making throttle tweaks unnecessary for startups? I have been starting my '96 on an inexpensive battery all winter. The formula seems to be no throttle, full choke, and a good three or four cranks of the starter. Most mornings are under 30F.
:sign13 That's an interesting point. The carb has a piston operated by the choke cable that slides in a cylinder fed by the brass tube you can see on the outside that goes to the float bowl. I don't have carbs so never gave it more than a passing thought while working on a Starck. I'll have to read up on it - unless Mustang drops in with a detailed description of how it works :hat10