bscrive
New member
It does sound like your battery has bit the dust. You should be able to turn it over several times with out any problems. Just do not leave the starter on for more than 10 seconds or you could burn it out.
Also, try not to turn the key off and on too many times or you will get gas in the oil and then you will have to change the oil to get it started. If you have too much gas in the oil, the engine will stay flooded and it will not start. nojoke
If you have a warmer area that you could bring the bike into, that would help. The big problem here is that the colder a battery is the less power it has to turn the bike over.
You only need 3 things for an engine to run. Spark, compression and gas. We know you are getting gas, by the smell. I don't think your engine is bad so you must have compression so the only thing you are lacking is spark which comes from the battery. If your battery cannot deliver enough power to turn the bike over and deliver enough to the coils then it won't start.
It may help if you can take the plugs out and dry them off, crank the engine over a couple of times to get rid of any gas in the cylinders and then replace the plugs. Just hold the throttle at full so gas is not put back in the cylinders when the plugs are out and you hit the starter.
Brian
Also, try not to turn the key off and on too many times or you will get gas in the oil and then you will have to change the oil to get it started. If you have too much gas in the oil, the engine will stay flooded and it will not start. nojoke
If you have a warmer area that you could bring the bike into, that would help. The big problem here is that the colder a battery is the less power it has to turn the bike over.
You only need 3 things for an engine to run. Spark, compression and gas. We know you are getting gas, by the smell. I don't think your engine is bad so you must have compression so the only thing you are lacking is spark which comes from the battery. If your battery cannot deliver enough power to turn the bike over and deliver enough to the coils then it won't start.
It may help if you can take the plugs out and dry them off, crank the engine over a couple of times to get rid of any gas in the cylinders and then replace the plugs. Just hold the throttle at full so gas is not put back in the cylinders when the plugs are out and you hit the starter.
Brian
Last edited: