Do you wait for your bike to warm up?

Do you wait for your bike to warm up?

Author
Discussion

Cakey_

Original Poster:

186 posts

32 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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Growing up I remember my dad and everyone else I knew running their bikes for a few minutes before riding off.
Then moving onto bikes myself I started doing the same because it's what everyone else did, I did this for years until recently when I started using my bike to commute and realised how antisocial it would be running a bike on tickover for a while really early in the morning.
I then stopped and got out of the habit, and when I look back i just think why did I ever do that.
I'm not sure if this was a thing we used to do on carbed bikes with chokes and it just carried on with the injected stuff or not.

So my question is do you run your bike for a few minutes before riding off or just get on and go?
My routine now is generally lid on, sit on the bike and fire it up, gloves on whilst the revs settle and go so it's running for no more than 5-10 seconds before I go.

Anyway intrested to hear your thoughts

Amused2death

2,502 posts

202 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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FI bike. Start bike, select music on phone, gloves on then ride. Probably 30 seconds of running before the wheels are turning.

pasmith73

405 posts

189 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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I do, just for the time it takes me to put on my helmet & gloves. In this time the revs have dropped down to normal idle. I don’t like riding off with the idle high as it feels like the bike is pulling artificially.

JulianHJ

8,785 posts

268 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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No, but then I don't thrash it from cold (or at all really).

ChocolateFrog

27,703 posts

179 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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No. Even on standard exhausts I'm aware the neighbours can probably hear it and I sometimes leave for work 0330.

Just ride it gently for the first few minutes.

Mr Squarekins

1,157 posts

68 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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I do. I tend to sit on it keeping it upright for 3-4 mins before putting on the side stand to get helmet and gloves. Bike shows the revcounter changing colour to show how much revs are acceptable. I let it get to 8k as 'ok' before setting off. It's up over 12k by the time I get to the end of the road.

Probably totally not needed, but costs me nothing smile

My neighbours are not that close.

hiccy18

2,934 posts

73 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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Not at all, never have done, don't see the point. Bloke along the road does it, doesn't irritate me but not sure what the other neighbours think.

black-k1

12,133 posts

235 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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JulianHJ said:
No, but then I don't thrash it from cold (or at all really).
This. It's the best approach for warming up the whole bike ( tyres, suspension etc.) and not just the engine. It's also much less antisocial.

Cakey_

Original Poster:

186 posts

32 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
quotequote all
So it must've been a thing more when bikes had chokes, I do vaguely remember if you tried riding with the choke on the revs would creep so wonder if its something that's followed on from the carb era.

Glad I'm not alone, and yes as others said I treat it gently on a cold engine, but the tyres are cold also so you'd have a death wish to start ringing its neck.

Donbot

4,113 posts

133 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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I did when I had bikes with carbs. Fi now so thumb the starter and go. No point in wasting fuel for no reason.

EVOTECH3BELL

812 posts

30 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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I do but only when the neighbours dog wakes me up at stupid o clock

bogie

16,566 posts

278 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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30 years ago when I had a bike with a choke then yes, I would let it warm up a bit, but then still ride off with it on the choke. Never bothered on a bike with automatic choke, just get on it an ride away. It warms up quicker if you ride it.

Birky_41

4,358 posts

190 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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My modern road bike not really but I am very mechanically sympathetic so start, pull off from my drive way and ride gently and smooth until the temp garage is 70+ degrees C

My old RS250 2 stroke I start and let tick over until it's registering a temp (starts at circa 40 degrees) and I'll ride again gently until it's upto temp

My modern GSXR which I only use on track I start up in the garage get upto temp on water but also conscious of oil getting warm so once upto temp I'll turn off but then start up again when my session is called and bring upto temp again on dash. Two heat cycles I think gets the oil upto temp too as I go straight out and almost immediately have it at 10-14k revs

All my Mx bikes are 2 strokes and all get warmed up gently before I go on track and thrash

littleredrooster

5,663 posts

202 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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Back in 1972, my Bonneville obstinately refused to be ridden either on full- or part-choke until it had run for about two minutes. Full choke resulted in eight-stroking and hiccupping, part-choke resulted in dying a sudden death as the throttle was opened even a tiny amount.

Neighbours hated me, I suspect!

Current steed - press button, start engine, move slowly down the drive past the car, onto main road - pin the throttle.

Biker 1

7,852 posts

125 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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Fire up bike, give it a couple of gentle blips to encourage oil circulation, then off down the half mile, single track lane to the main road, mostly dawdling in 2nd gear due to crap road finish. I won't give it the beans until temp gauge is up to normal, usually after a couple of miles.
Seems to me that everything, including tyres, are designed to operate at an optimum temperature to allow for thermal expansion etc. Thrashing a cold engine just doesn't seem right....

Sam Aigal

41 posts

16 months

Sunday 17th September 2023
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Yep.
But I have no neighbours so running the bike for a minute or so whilst I put helmet and gloves on isn't a problem. And then a mile at least to get my self settled and my head into gear.
But I've always done the same with cars and so far it's paid off with some clocking very high mileage.
I like to think it's cos I treat 'em nice.

paddy1970

782 posts

115 months

Monday 18th September 2023
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The practice of warming up a motorcycle engine before riding stems from older, carburetted engines, which often required time to warm up, especially in colder weather. This would ensure optimal performance and reduce the risk of engine stalling. Modern fuel-injected motorcycles, however, are designed to be much more efficient and do not typically require an extended warm-up period.

66mpg

659 posts

113 months

Monday 18th September 2023
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I like to check the oil level before I start the bike. One had a window to spot the oil level, one has a dipstick and the level should be checked cold.

The Trident 660 manual says to idle the engine for five minutes, then let it stand for three minutes before checking the dipstick.

Krikkit

26,919 posts

187 months

Monday 18th September 2023
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Like most with a modern FI bike, I get on when I'm ready to ride then start it, fire it up then quick brake check

Four Litre

2,104 posts

198 months

Monday 18th September 2023
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Sadly not. I time it so I have everything ready, wheel the bike to the end of my driveway and ride off as soon as I start it. My neighbours have a new born and I don't want to ps off the whole road!