Hi everybody.
I've been meaning to ask this for a while, but I just haven't until now. When I start my bike when the engine is cold, as in not warmed up yet (not cold outside, although it does happen when it is cold outside as well), it will rev up very high for a few seconds (maybe several seconds).
I'm sure this is a jetting "problem," namely with the pilot jet/circuit. Everything in the top end was new as of last spring, and I didn't ride much over the summer. I do have the bike jetted pretty well: it runs cleanly, no bogging (lean or rich) anywhere. I did play with jetting a lot over the summer, and as I recall my jetting for the summer was 152/cel#3/40. This was in 75-85 degree or so temperatures and about 600 feet or so of elevation.
The problem, as I said before, only occurs when the engine is cold. A dirty air filter seems to aggrevate the problem. Also, the choke has little to no effect on the problem.
So my question is, is this an indication of an overly lean pilot jet? Or could some other part of the jetting circuit (air screw)? Logic seems to dictate that it must be a lean pilot circuit, but as we all know, logic isn't always correct. Most of my confusion comes from a very foggy memory of a thread that 'maybe' said that too fat a pilot could have this result.
I never did any testing to find a jetting combination that made the motor not rev up when cold-started, since it usually isn't that bad- I only jetted while the engine was warm. Sometimes, though, the motor revs up so much that it scares me: I don't want a cold seize!
Short end to a long thread: will too lean a pilot make an engine rev high when started cold?
Thanks in advance for the help.
Regards,
Lutz