First start is perfect but second start is a lot tougher....
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First start is perfect but second start is a lot tougher....
Buddy 150 starts perfectly first start of the day but after I ride it somewhere and shut it down and then start again its harder to start. Yesterday I had t try to keep turning it. Any quick fix ideas or what may be wrong with it?
I electric start it.
its a 2008 150cc Buddy Italia
1,200 miles
got first oil change at 600 miles
I live in San Diego, CA and I ride my buddy at least 4 times a week anywhere between 1mile to 10 miles/day
I electric start it.
its a 2008 150cc Buddy Italia
1,200 miles
got first oil change at 600 miles
I live in San Diego, CA and I ride my buddy at least 4 times a week anywhere between 1mile to 10 miles/day
- Drumwoulf
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Re: First start is perfect but second start is a lot tougher
You might not be riding it long enough (or fast enough) between startups to restore and maintain a peak charge in the battery, as starting up the motor draws the most current. If you can, try putting the battery on a Battery Tender in the garage when you're not riding it, and see if that doesn't improve your starting problems...lazygregg wrote:Buddy 150 starts perfectly first start of the day but after I ride it somewhere and shut it down and then start again its harder to start. Yesterday I had t try to keep turning it. Any quick fix ideas or what may be wrong with it?
I electric start it.
its a 2008 150cc Buddy Italia
1,200 miles
got first oil change at 600 miles
I live in San Diego, CA and I ride my buddy at least 4 times a week anywhere between 1mile to 10 miles/day
Last edited by Drumwoulf on Sun Jan 25, 2009 11:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Namaste,
~drummer~
07 Buddy 125
07 Vespa GT200
~drummer~
07 Buddy 125
07 Vespa GT200
- jfrost2
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I dunno about the battery, the bike is ridden regularly, so the battery should be fine, I just started a 150 that has been sitting around for atleast 2 months without being touched, started up fine and rode fine.
When you restart the bike, are you gone for a period of time? Or just turn it off, then start back up in a minute?
When you restart the bike, are you gone for a period of time? Or just turn it off, then start back up in a minute?
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usually anywhere between 30 mins and a few hoursjfrost2 wrote:I dunno about the battery, the bike is ridden regularly, so the battery should be fine, I just started a 150 that has been sitting around for atleast 2 months without being touched, started up fine and rode fine.
When you restart the bike, are you gone for a period of time? Or just turn it off, then start back up in a minute?
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- ericalm
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And in Michigan. The cold may have something to do with that.jmsmith802 wrote:I have to give my buddy a little throttle to get it to start after it has been warmed up sometimes. But I'm on a 50..
Eric // LA Scooter Meetup Group // Stella 4T // Vespa LX // Vespa LXS // Honda Helix // some, uh, projects…
- jmsmith802
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- bluelghtning
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I think each model is a bit unique and whats work best.
My XT225 is a bike that I can't touch the gas. Its a cold natured beast and when it's cold it requires full choke and then usually then the choke catches and it revs up. If you try any gas while starting though, no luck.
My Blurs start awesome if I give them just a quick throttle twist immediately after the starter starts spinning before the motor actually catches. Thats the way I've found they start the best. They settle right into a nice idle after that with no problems of stalling or needing restarts. Now keep in mind there is a fine line between giving it gas before you actually start spinning the motor with the starter. If you do it too early, it just bogs down the carb with too much fuel.
I think Sarah's Buddy starts pretty good with no gas added to it, but I don't ride it enough to know for sure.
My XT225 is a bike that I can't touch the gas. Its a cold natured beast and when it's cold it requires full choke and then usually then the choke catches and it revs up. If you try any gas while starting though, no luck.
My Blurs start awesome if I give them just a quick throttle twist immediately after the starter starts spinning before the motor actually catches. Thats the way I've found they start the best. They settle right into a nice idle after that with no problems of stalling or needing restarts. Now keep in mind there is a fine line between giving it gas before you actually start spinning the motor with the starter. If you do it too early, it just bogs down the carb with too much fuel.
I think Sarah's Buddy starts pretty good with no gas added to it, but I don't ride it enough to know for sure.
- newslinky
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My 2008 St Tropez is the same way. After riding it for a while if I turn the engine off for a few minutes and go to start it again it will seem to strugle to start again. It always has so far but it just seems to have trouble getting that combustion going. The starteer turns over like a champ so its not a battery drain issue. I have a couple of times done what bluelghtning suggested in that once it is turning over I give the throttle a small quick twist and this usually fires the engine right up. Not sure why it acts this way but I am sure the theories given here are not far from correct if not totally correct.
Proud owner of a Buddy St. Tropez 150
- olhogrider
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Here's my guess. When warmed, the "choke" or enricher circuit of the carb is giving it too much gas. By opening the throttle while cranking it, you are overriding the idle enricher and leaning out the mixture. Some engines need more than others. If it bothers you, take it back to the dealer for adjustment.