if it fires at all, its not your ignition system... unless that short time killed it (I doubt it). You may have an air leak but again I doubt it, if it's bad enough to kill the motor, then it shouldnt start to begin with (had this issue). As another member said, the choke could be the culprit.
Does your bike "kick" forward right as it dies? If so, your clutch is catching. Either you're releasing the clutch too much without enough speed (common mistake with new riders and even new drivers in standard cars) or the clutch plate itself isn't releasing. Remember the motors are only ~2hp, while you're significantly lighter than a car, the power to weight ratio is far lower than a car (You'd have to pull 20hp to get the same ratio as a Lotus Elise, 10hp for a typical old ford taurus).
When troubleshooting, the more detail you give us about what exactly it does just before and when it dies, the better answer we can give you. Detailed pictures of the problem area are ideal and videos showing what it's doing are the best.
Does your bike "kick" forward right as it dies? If so, your clutch is catching. Either you're releasing the clutch too much without enough speed (common mistake with new riders and even new drivers in standard cars) or the clutch plate itself isn't releasing. Remember the motors are only ~2hp, while you're significantly lighter than a car, the power to weight ratio is far lower than a car (You'd have to pull 20hp to get the same ratio as a Lotus Elise, 10hp for a typical old ford taurus).
When troubleshooting, the more detail you give us about what exactly it does just before and when it dies, the better answer we can give you. Detailed pictures of the problem area are ideal and videos showing what it's doing are the best.
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