ThumperPaul
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SuzukiSavage.com Rocks!
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Houston, Texas
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Sorry, this is confusiing between your comments and OhioMoto’s comment.
If you can start up and ride away without using any choke, I’d consider this normal when the outdoor temperature is above 65°.
To OhioMoto’s comment, 1/2 choke or full choke should only be needed for warmup when the outdoor temp is lower. If you have a really small (undersized lean) pilot jet, you probably do need the choke all the time. But I think it’s incorrect to say the pilot jet is too big if you don’t need the choke. Perhaps this is a colder climate issue (like OH and PA), but my bike would laugh at me for using the choke in TX most of the year. I need the choke in January for a couple minutes when I want to ride in 55° weather.
That said, it’s not a bad practice to use the choke for 2-3 minutes with every cold start. You want/need the higher idle RPMs to ensure oil flow to the top of the motor. Letting the bike stumble at low rpm while trying to idle on the side stand doesn’t create sufficient oil pressure to the top of the motor. Admittedly, even today’s modern computerized fuel injected vehicles will usually cold start up at a higher warmup enriched fuel mixture rpm even in the hot summer. So, I guess I can agree you can always use the choke at initial cold start.
The choke is designed to be a “cold start” warmup aid. It’s not designed to be a “dial a jet” mechanism to create proper air/fuel mixture when the bike is up to operating temperature. The choke has a “run position” (off). When the carb is jetted and tuned correctly, the choke should be in the RUN position while riding.
If you think you are also running lean with the choke 1/2 open, I think you are mistaken. If anything, it would create an overly rich condition once the bike is up to operating temperature. I think you are mistaking a rich bog for a lean bog when you say the rpm’s hang (I’d need to experience this first hand to better understand this description). That said, it is highly unlikely you are running lean with the choke on. It’s contradictory to what the choke is designed to do (enrich the fuel mixture when it’s cold and the bike needs extra fuel to warmup and get going).
Afterfire (backfire thru the exhaust) is caused by unburnt fuel entering the exhaust header. It mostly only happens on deceleration. It’s counterintuitive that the “white spacer mod” that enriches the low midrange fuel mixture alleviates afterfire on deceleration. That brings us to the “transient enrichment valve” (TEV). The TEV is designed to address afterfire. In a perfect world, it would always do its job, but it’s not 100%. Tinkering with the TEV spring (spring length, spring weight) has also been tried with mixed success to alleviate afterfire by some forum members. More on that in the tech section - but at minimum, clean your TEV (you don’t have to remove the carb to do it, but it’s probably better if you do).
Your afterfire is being alleviated because you’ve enriched the fuel circuit (low midrange circuit under high vacuum specifically under deceleration) by using 1/2 choke.
It’s contradictory that you think you are running lean using partial choke while simultaneously curing afterfire that’s created by a low midrange lean condition under deceleration (low carb vacuum).
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