problem with starting
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problem with starting
Hey all,
I didn't do a search because I was not sure what to look for. So here is the problem.
I turn the key on and switch the kill switch to "on" (gas side of the handle bar).... hit the button and nothing happens, nothing. Perhaps I am crowding the power-up routine where the caution lights come on then off but will that cause the bike not to start? This problem has been intermittent and first showed at six hundred miles. I killed the motor at a stop sign and rocked the bike once or twice where it started. Now it happens maybe once in every ten starts. And two or three at a time.
It happened twice at the dealership and they said it was a specific problem in the electronics. Should be covered in the warranty.
Something I do that seems to get me around the problem is I push the bike in gear with clutch out. I just bump or rock the bike jarring the insides of the motor. I think it is a compression lock...is that possible?
After the bike starts no problem with running.
Your thoughts please...
Robert
I didn't do a search because I was not sure what to look for. So here is the problem.
I turn the key on and switch the kill switch to "on" (gas side of the handle bar).... hit the button and nothing happens, nothing. Perhaps I am crowding the power-up routine where the caution lights come on then off but will that cause the bike not to start? This problem has been intermittent and first showed at six hundred miles. I killed the motor at a stop sign and rocked the bike once or twice where it started. Now it happens maybe once in every ten starts. And two or three at a time.
It happened twice at the dealership and they said it was a specific problem in the electronics. Should be covered in the warranty.
Something I do that seems to get me around the problem is I push the bike in gear with clutch out. I just bump or rock the bike jarring the insides of the motor. I think it is a compression lock...is that possible?
After the bike starts no problem with running.
Your thoughts please...
Robert
08' R1200R
Sweet...

Sweet...

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ContraMoto
- Basic User
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Re: problem with starting
Does it do it in all start settings...?
- Neutral, clutch out, stand up(down)
- Neutral, clutch pulled, stand up(down)
- In gear, clutch pulled, stand up
... or only in certain settings...?
- Neutral, clutch out, stand up(down)
- Neutral, clutch pulled, stand up(down)
- In gear, clutch pulled, stand up
... or only in certain settings...?
'07 R12R Black w/stripes
North Cali
North Cali
Re: problem with starting
I don't think it's a "they all do it situation" as I don't recall anyone ever having a problem like this. I would stay all over the dealer on this one, and push the fact that it's a safety issue.
I assume by compression lock your referring to a hydrostatic lock condition where fluid gets inside the cylinder and locks the engine up, your problem doesn't sound like that.
It's most likely electrical as the starting circuit has to go through a bunch of switches to start the engine.
Try holding the clutch in, hitting the sidestand (up position) with your foot, jiggling (is that a word) the shift lever. If any of that helps tell the tech that works on your bike.
I assume by compression lock your referring to a hydrostatic lock condition where fluid gets inside the cylinder and locks the engine up, your problem doesn't sound like that.
It's most likely electrical as the starting circuit has to go through a bunch of switches to start the engine.
Try holding the clutch in, hitting the sidestand (up position) with your foot, jiggling (is that a word) the shift lever. If any of that helps tell the tech that works on your bike.
Harry Costello -- Jersey Shore
2007 R1200R
1974 + 75 CB125S
1971 R75
2020 Guzzi V85TT
BMWMOA 57358
2007 R1200R
1974 + 75 CB125S
1971 R75
2020 Guzzi V85TT
BMWMOA 57358
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creamora
- Basic User
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- Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 5:38 pm
- Location: Northwest Hills of CT, USA
Re: problem with starting
I am religious about letting the power-up sequence complete before starting.
Hopefully the shop's diagnostic readout will show something on the issue that will allow it to be resolved. Please report back.
Hopefully the shop's diagnostic readout will show something on the issue that will allow it to be resolved. Please report back.
2009 R1200R Black
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deilenberger
- Honorary Lifer
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Re: problem with starting
It's not clear what's happening:
- Key on, are there lights? If so - the ignition lock is working
- Key on, no lights? I'd be sniffing around the battery
- Key on, lights, press starter button - nothing happens? Anything odd displayed on the cluster (like EWS)?
- Key on, lights, press starter button - engine cranks but doesn't start? I'd pull the plugs to see if the problem is electrical or fuel related (wet plugs = electrical, dry plugs = fuel..)
Random Comments:
-----------------------
The rocking it in gear can jar the engine a tad. Even though the starter is NOT engaged with the engine, in the case of a starter with a bad commutator - this can sometimes jar it enough that it will make contact and work again. Not totally uncommon on BMW cars. The Valeo starter we have isn't a paragon of goodness.. (there is a Bosch that can replace it..)
I know the MSF teaches using the "kill" switch to stop the engine, and it's probably a GOOD IDEA since you will then automatically reach for it if the bike happens to decide to lay on it's side with the engine running.. but, dunno if that switch is up to repeated regular use. Just dunno. I wasn't MSF trained originally (dirty bike trained.. we just stalled the things..) so I don't stop the engine that way. Dunno if it's related, but you might try using the key to stop the engine and see if the incidents stop or decrease in frequency.
- Key on, are there lights? If so - the ignition lock is working
- Key on, no lights? I'd be sniffing around the battery
- Key on, lights, press starter button - nothing happens? Anything odd displayed on the cluster (like EWS)?
- Key on, lights, press starter button - engine cranks but doesn't start? I'd pull the plugs to see if the problem is electrical or fuel related (wet plugs = electrical, dry plugs = fuel..)
Random Comments:
-----------------------
The rocking it in gear can jar the engine a tad. Even though the starter is NOT engaged with the engine, in the case of a starter with a bad commutator - this can sometimes jar it enough that it will make contact and work again. Not totally uncommon on BMW cars. The Valeo starter we have isn't a paragon of goodness.. (there is a Bosch that can replace it..)
I know the MSF teaches using the "kill" switch to stop the engine, and it's probably a GOOD IDEA since you will then automatically reach for it if the bike happens to decide to lay on it's side with the engine running.. but, dunno if that switch is up to repeated regular use. Just dunno. I wasn't MSF trained originally (dirty bike trained.. we just stalled the things..) so I don't stop the engine that way. Dunno if it's related, but you might try using the key to stop the engine and see if the incidents stop or decrease in frequency.
Don Eilenberger - NJ Shore
2012 R1200R - I love this bike!
2012 R1200R - I love this bike!
Re: problem with starting
I have had instances in which I would press the start button but for some reason it would not immediately start. It would crank for a few seconds but not start. After I released the button following the failed start attempt, I would immediately try to start the bike again. This time nothing would happen. I would release the button and then immediately try again and then it cranks and starts. I think the start button is infrequently intermittent.
Paul
2009 R1200R
2009 R1200R
- Bob Ain't Stoppin'
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Re: problem with starting
I'm gonna risk sounding like an idiot here, butt! I trust you are aware that the kill switch is a center run, and either left or right kill thing. So if you push the switch to either side, you're not gonna start. Other than that, the above posts cover your possibilities.
Re: problem with starting
The bike is always
kick stand up...clutch in..in first gear... lights are on...but nothing. The motor does not turn over..nothing. It is like I have turned the key "on" but have not pushed the start button.
My bike is almost never in neutral.
kill switch is inn center.... and the response is as if the battery is disconnected... nothing.
I have noticed the yellow triangle is "on"...left side of the speedometer. Page 24 of my owners manual. I think the yellow triangle is normal at starting and always goes off after the bike idles for 30 or 40 seconds.
I haven't noticed anything on the EWS side but I'll look for that next time the problem comes around.
The only time the yellow triangle warning light came on and didn't go off I found the connection (an electrical plug) just in front and above the left cylinder had come loose. I think it is part of the electronic fuel system. I am aware of the problem and reconnect it when it comes loose. But even with this plug disconnected the bike still starts.
I read somewheres that rocking the bike is a solution to a problem that sounds like mine...I am not sure that rocking has any affect but it helps me not panic. I think the writing was about V-twins, perhaps even vintage V-twins.
I have turned the key "off" then "on" and had the bike to start but used this method several months ago.
I hope I've touch on all the responses ... Thanks All.
Robert
kick stand up...clutch in..in first gear... lights are on...but nothing. The motor does not turn over..nothing. It is like I have turned the key "on" but have not pushed the start button.
My bike is almost never in neutral.
kill switch is inn center.... and the response is as if the battery is disconnected... nothing.
I have noticed the yellow triangle is "on"...left side of the speedometer. Page 24 of my owners manual. I think the yellow triangle is normal at starting and always goes off after the bike idles for 30 or 40 seconds.
I haven't noticed anything on the EWS side but I'll look for that next time the problem comes around.
The only time the yellow triangle warning light came on and didn't go off I found the connection (an electrical plug) just in front and above the left cylinder had come loose. I think it is part of the electronic fuel system. I am aware of the problem and reconnect it when it comes loose. But even with this plug disconnected the bike still starts.
I read somewheres that rocking the bike is a solution to a problem that sounds like mine...I am not sure that rocking has any affect but it helps me not panic. I think the writing was about V-twins, perhaps even vintage V-twins.
I have turned the key "off" then "on" and had the bike to start but used this method several months ago.
I hope I've touch on all the responses ... Thanks All.
Robert
08' R1200R
Sweet...

Sweet...

-
deilenberger
- Honorary Lifer
- Posts: 4210
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- Contact:
Re: problem with starting
OK, just as a test - try starting in neutral. There are three inhibiting switches/circuits on the R12R..redwing wrote:The bike is always
kick stand up...clutch in..in first gear... lights are on...but nothing. The motor does not turn over..nothing. It is like I have turned the key "on" but have not pushed the start button.
My bike is almost never in neutral.
1. Sidestand switch, inhibits the starter from turning IF the bike is in gear, and the clutch isn't pulled in and the sidestand is deployed.
2. Clutch switch, inhibits the starter if the bike is in gear, and the sidestand is deployed.
3. Transmission switch, inhibits the starter if the clutch isn't pulled in, if the transmission is in gear. It also will kill the engine if you put the bike into gear with the sidestand deployed.
So - there's a lot of stuff going on, and the failure of ANY one can result in the starter not turning.
As a WAG - since the lights come on, your ignition switch is probably OK, and we'll hope your battery is OK since when they die, they usually stay dead. If I had to WAG - a misadjusted clutch switch might be the problem. That's something where the GS-911 could come in handy, since it can monitor the "state" (open/closed) of all these controls.
To see if it's the clutch switch - put the bike in neutral. Then it ignores the clutch switch, and sidestand switch.
Good luck with it, and let us know the results!
kill switch is inn center.... and the response is as if the battery is disconnected... nothing.
I have noticed the yellow triangle is "on"...left side of the speedometer. Page 24 of my owners manual. I think the yellow triangle is normal at starting and always goes off after the bike idles for 30 or 40 seconds.
I haven't noticed anything on the EWS side but I'll look for that next time the problem comes around.
The only time the yellow triangle warning light came on and didn't go off I found the connection (an electrical plug) just in front and above the left cylinder had come loose. I think it is part of the electronic fuel system. I am aware of the problem and reconnect it when it comes loose. But even with this plug disconnected the bike still starts.
I read somewheres that rocking the bike is a solution to a problem that sounds like mine...I am not sure that rocking has any affect but it helps me not panic. I think the writing was about V-twins, perhaps even vintage V-twins.
I have turned the key "off" then "on" and had the bike to start but used this method several months ago.
I hope I've touch on all the responses ... Thanks All.
Robert
Don Eilenberger - NJ Shore
2012 R1200R - I love this bike!
2012 R1200R - I love this bike!
Re: problem with starting
I often (as in once in every five starts or so) pull the clutch too soon after putting the kill switch to the "run" position. It seems in these cases that the on-board computer missed the fact that I pulled in the clutch, and so doesn't think it's in the correct starting position. Thus, pressing the starter button does nothing -- no sound, no starter, no nothing.
In all cases, letting out the clutch and pulling it back in will allow the bike to start. Don't know if that's what's happening to you, but it's worth a shot.
In all cases, letting out the clutch and pulling it back in will allow the bike to start. Don't know if that's what's happening to you, but it's worth a shot.
I've had this happen maybe twice, where no matter what I did (clutch in and out and in and out) the starter wouldn't engage. I turned off the ignition switch and turned it back on and it fired right up.redwing wrote:I have turned the key "off" then "on" and had the bike to start but used this method several months ago.
Re: problem with starting
OK, I must be missing something, or there's something I don't know. I've been riding since dirt was invented, and I have always started in neutral (except when the engine dies at a stoplight). Is there a reason NOT to start in neutral? And a related question: why use the "kill" switch at all, except in fall-downs? Why not just turn off the key when you've finished riding?
Mike in SB
2009 R1200R all black
ex1970 BMW R60/5
ex1959 BMW pre-slash R60
ex Matchless G80CS
2009 R1200R all black
ex1970 BMW R60/5
ex1959 BMW pre-slash R60
ex Matchless G80CS
Re: problem with starting
You don't have to wait. It's perfectly fine to turn the ignition key on and hit the starter while all the electronic checks are in process. Says so right in the owners manual. I do it all the time.creamora wrote:I am religious about letting the power-up sequence complete before starting.![]()
Hopefully the shop's diagnostic readout will show something on the issue that will allow it to be resolved. Please report back.
10 R1200R
09 KLX 250sf
74 H2
77 RD
69 Kawasaki Bushwacker
67 Kawasaki 120SS
65 CB 450 Black Bomber !
09 KLX 250sf
74 H2
77 RD
69 Kawasaki Bushwacker
67 Kawasaki 120SS
65 CB 450 Black Bomber !
- websterize
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Re: problem with starting
Well … it's perfectly fine if all your systems are Go.Ric wrote:You don't have to wait. It's perfectly fine to turn the ignition key on and hit the starter while all the electronic checks are in process. Says so right in the owners manual. I do it all the time.
Me, I don't mind waiting the two seconds it takes for the pre-ride check to do its thing."The instrument cluster runs a test of the instruments and the telltale and warning lights when the ignition is switched on: this is the Pre-Ride-Check. The test is aborted if you start the engine before it completes." 2008, UK manual, p. 67
Bill
Re: problem with starting
Maybe, the on-board computer (OBC?) is seeing an important sensor in 2 different states during the boot up sequence? i.e. Turning the key and pulling in the clutch at the same time? The OBC may be making multiple checks of the sensors, and if a sensor is not giving consistent states, that sensor is ignored for the remainder of this run cycle. Turning the key off-on resets this.
Just a thought.
-jim
Just a thought.
-jim
2010 BMW R1200R Alpine White (Need another.
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1997 Kawasaki ZX11
1969 BMW R50/2 w/hack
1997 Kawasaki ZX11
1969 BMW R50/2 w/hack
Re: problem with starting
Did you get the warranty done on the antenna ring recall?
'11 BMW F800R
'08 BMW R1200R
'07 BMW R1200S
'84 BMW R100
'08 BMW R1200R
'07 BMW R1200S
'84 BMW R100
Re: problem with starting
Starting in neutral limits the number of sensors involved ... I'll give that a try Don ... thanks
I missed the antenna ring recall.... what's this about..thanks
xprof ... I like leaving the bike in gear when parked because I think it gives the bike more stability... also putting the bike in neutral is done with my left hand ... I got a bum leg (left) ... and using the kill switch is recommended by the MSF but using the key is ok by me and I'll do that so as to bypass a possible faulty kill switch.
jess ... it sounds like we have a similar issue but perhaps not identical ... thanks...the bike's so dependable I expect it never to fail.
I'll have to watch but I think my bike doesn't crank until the on board computer is through checking... maybe that is part of the problem.
The problem is not a hard fail and only perhaps ten times since May 09' but probably 3 in the past month.. My main worry is getting stuck somewhere with a hard fail and it seems to be drawing to a head.
My car (I think most cars have an error register) has an error register where a tech can use a device to get a read on the error message when a sensor is failing and so lead to a fix. Does the R1200R have a computer hookup where a computer can give an error message relating to the specific sensor? Seems right and we do have a canbus system.??
Thanks All
Robert
Rolando33 wrote:Did you get the warranty done on the antenna ring recall?
I missed the antenna ring recall.... what's this about..thanks
xprof ... I like leaving the bike in gear when parked because I think it gives the bike more stability... also putting the bike in neutral is done with my left hand ... I got a bum leg (left) ... and using the kill switch is recommended by the MSF but using the key is ok by me and I'll do that so as to bypass a possible faulty kill switch.
jess ... it sounds like we have a similar issue but perhaps not identical ... thanks...the bike's so dependable I expect it never to fail.
I'll have to watch but I think my bike doesn't crank until the on board computer is through checking... maybe that is part of the problem.
The problem is not a hard fail and only perhaps ten times since May 09' but probably 3 in the past month.. My main worry is getting stuck somewhere with a hard fail and it seems to be drawing to a head.
My car (I think most cars have an error register) has an error register where a tech can use a device to get a read on the error message when a sensor is failing and so lead to a fix. Does the R1200R have a computer hookup where a computer can give an error message relating to the specific sensor? Seems right and we do have a canbus system.??
Thanks All
Robert
08' R1200R
Sweet...

Sweet...

Re: problem with starting
Muscle memory. The MSF courses (among others) teach new riders to use the kill switch to shut off the bike every single time. The theory goes that by going through the kill switch sequence over and over again, it will be automatic during that one moment when you're in a panic.xprof wrote:And a related question: why use the "kill" switch at all, except in fall-downs? Why not just turn off the key when you've finished riding?
I like this theory a lot, and make it a point to use the kill switch every time I switch off the engine and again as part of my start-up sequence.
Re: problem with starting
Their's a few things that the MSF teaches that I find puzzling - now I have another one.
Harry Costello -- Jersey Shore
2007 R1200R
1974 + 75 CB125S
1971 R75
2020 Guzzi V85TT
BMWMOA 57358
2007 R1200R
1974 + 75 CB125S
1971 R75
2020 Guzzi V85TT
BMWMOA 57358
Re: problem with starting
It works for me. On the few occasions that I've crashed or dropped a running bike, I hit the kill switch without even thinking about it.mogu83 wrote:Their's a few things that the MSF teaches that I find puzzling - now I have another one.
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ContraMoto
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Re: problem with starting
there are some threads at advrider where people note problems with the GS by using the kill switch all the time. Folks have reported intermittent starting sequence issues when using kill switch.
I kill the motor by dropping the kickstand and then turning the ignition off. Not sure if that's best, but it keeps me from starting to get off with the stand up (which I did once).
I think MSF has the right idea about the kill switch. Only reason I don't use it is, again, the problems reported by GS owners.
I kill the motor by dropping the kickstand and then turning the ignition off. Not sure if that's best, but it keeps me from starting to get off with the stand up (which I did once).
I think MSF has the right idea about the kill switch. Only reason I don't use it is, again, the problems reported by GS owners.
'07 R12R Black w/stripes
North Cali
North Cali