95 Nighthawk 750 Starting Problem
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95 Nighthawk 750 Starting Problem
Has anyone has an problems starting their Nighthawks? Mine will turn over easily but not start easily. It will start better if run everyday but to start it once a month or so in the winter, it's a bear to start. My guess right off is a fuel delivery problem vs spark. Any ideas would be appreciated..thanks.
Jeff
'04 Black Honda Rebel
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Do you normally keep the fuel tap in the "off" position? If so, you'll need to turn it to "prime" for about 20 seconds before starting. Otherwise, the engine must generate a vacuum from spinning on the starter to activate the fuel flow.
The Nighthawk is also a cold blooded creature, thanks to EPA regs. If it's cold and hasn't been started in awhile, you may need full choke to get it to fire. Even in the summer months, I often need a little bit of choke in the mornings. During the winter, when it might be as cold as 50 degrees around here
, I need to use about 80% on the choke.
The Nighthawk is also a cold blooded creature, thanks to EPA regs. If it's cold and hasn't been started in awhile, you may need full choke to get it to fire. Even in the summer months, I often need a little bit of choke in the mornings. During the winter, when it might be as cold as 50 degrees around here

Bikin' John
'93 Honda CB750 Nighthawk
'93 Honda CB750 Nighthawk
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You have a "Prime" Position ? My '91 only has Off, On and Reserve. My Buddy has a 99, same thing. Did they change it for newer models?flynrider wrote:Do you normally keep the fuel tap in the "off" position? If so, you'll need to turn it to "prime" for about 20 seconds before starting. Otherwise, the engine must generate a vacuum from spinning on the starter to activate the fuel flow.
The Nighthawk is also a cold blooded creature, thanks to EPA regs. If it's cold and hasn't been started in awhile, you may need full choke to get it to fire. Even in the summer months, I often need a little bit of choke in the mornings. During the winter, when it might be as cold as 50 degrees around here, I need to use about 80% on the choke.
Richard - Fully Dressed
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Naked 1991 Honda NightHawk 750
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Oops. You're probably right there. I was thinking of a different bike (so many bikes, so little timemydlyfkryzis wrote:You have a "Prime" Position ? My '91 only has Off, On and Reserve. My Buddy has a 99, same thing. Did they change it for newer models?

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'93 Honda CB750 Nighthawk
'93 Honda CB750 Nighthawk
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My 95 nighthawk 750 has to crank for about 8 seconds on full-choke before it fires when cold. Once it fires it's fine. It won't start without full choke when cold.
But, if I give it just a hair of throttle with full choke as I crank it, it fires immediately rather than cranking awhile. I mean the smallest amount of throttle that you can give it and release immediately once it fires.
No prime position on my 95, just "on", "off", "reserve". But I believe flyinrider is right, the engine must be running to pull fuel thru the petcock (it has a vacuum fitting on it), so if it's been "off" awhile it may be especially hard to start. I leave mine "on" all the time, but it rarely sits for over a week.
But, if I give it just a hair of throttle with full choke as I crank it, it fires immediately rather than cranking awhile. I mean the smallest amount of throttle that you can give it and release immediately once it fires.
No prime position on my 95, just "on", "off", "reserve". But I believe flyinrider is right, the engine must be running to pull fuel thru the petcock (it has a vacuum fitting on it), so if it's been "off" awhile it may be especially hard to start. I leave mine "on" all the time, but it rarely sits for over a week.
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