!Kill question!

HPIAdam

New Member
I did away with the kill switch while trouble shooting.
The method i use to kill the engine is:

Hold in clutch
come to full stop
slowly release clutch until engine dies.

my brother suspected it might not be to good on my clutch, is that true?
if so, is there any safer way of killing it?
 
choke the motor out would be better for the motor and clutch.

Come to a complete stop pull the clutch in and raise the choke lever all the way up. The motor will shut off due to no air.
 
Either method will work.

I had one bike that I "killed with the clutch" for over a thousand miles with no appreciable wear to the clutch.
 
I use the clutch to kill the engine on EVERY bike that I build.
The clutch is still fine on the very first bike built! (the customer still rides it most every day)
I've seen a few problems using the kill buttons.
 
I use the choke method currently. Eventually I will put a quality kill switch on...I just haven't gotten around to it.
 
What you going to do if your throttle sticks wide open and you have a new person riding it.
Is he or she going to be able to reach down and choke it? While scared!
A kill switch should be on there in my opinion.
 
i agree with the idea that a working kill switch should be wired in I myself run a kill switch i was just giving an idea of how to kill the motor without using the clutch
 
What you going to do if your throttle sticks wide open and you have a new person riding it.
Is he or she going to be able to reach down and choke it? While scared!
A kill switch should be on there in my opinion.
100% in agreement.
Tom
 
Yer on my old bike i had a kill switch wireed it and always worked never found a problem with it.
I think because the clutches on these engines are extreamly tough it woudent hurt em.
just get a kill switch they are cheap as chips and are easy to wire in.
 
using the choke not only starvesthe engine for air but floods it making it harder to start next time. i use the clutch or the kill switch, depends on the bike. over 1200 mile using the clutch to kill the engine and never even had to adjust it yet
 
To answer your question Norman- 1. Use the brakes. 2. Never let an inexperience newb ride your bike. 3. make sure the throttle won't "stick wide open". Never had that happen on any vehicle I have ever owned.

Still, a good quality working kill switch is a good idea, the stock crappy one won't do you any good if it doesn't work, or worse, works when it shouldn't.
 
What you going to do if your throttle sticks wide open and you have a new person riding it.
Is he or she going to be able to reach down and choke it? While scared!
A kill switch should be on there in my opinion.

thats why no one rides my bike ;)
 
using the choke not only starvesthe engine for air but floods it making it harder to start next time. i use the clutch or the kill switch, depends on the bike. over 1200 mile using the clutch to kill the engine and never even had to adjust it yet

makes sense.
i suppose ill just stick to clutching it
 
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