My Commando won't start

Any chance choke is not partially on.
I've been riding a 750 since 1991 in Canada. Never needed choke even at freezing, just a smidge longer on the tickler. Removed choke system & packed away. Possibly you're just to rich on a cold start, & plugs wetting up at first kick.
Best of luck
The bike does not have chokes fitted. There was very little wetting of the plugs before I cleaned the carbs. They are wetter now after a couple of kicks.
 
Ever try cold with an intial shot of ether?
Bad fuel a reality in Canada, so bad that fresh premium from Name-Brand station would not fire in an injected car recently. Ether is a quick check to see if you should drain & refuel. Good carb clean & adjust won't help if fuel is bad.
Best of luck. Cheers
 
Another point I noted in your original description...a modern rectifier and a zener? Please describe this more....most folks move to a reg/rec....which fully replaced the zener.
 
What carbs do you have?

You say you cleaned out the jets, but the pilot jets are very difficult to clean on mk1 concentrics, some would say impossible without modification (search Old Brits guides for this).

Carbs also wear: slides, bodies, needles, needle jets all wear.

50 plus year old carbs WILL be worn. They could also have none standard jets / needles.

So, stripping the carbs to verify what slides, needles, spray tubes, jets you have, and what condition they are in, is a needed step.

It’s similar with the ign: wires, black boxes, pick up plates, HT leads, plug caps, etc can all suffer age / use related degradation.

So… when it comes to problem solving on a 50 plus year old bike like this, it is often NOT a case of searching for one finite root cause, it is often a case of several contributory causes (each one quite minor alone) combining to cause your symptoms. Therefore, what is required is to ‘confirm / revert to standard’ with the relevant systems / parts.

You DO have one known issue, the coils. IMO you are pissing in the wind trying to work around this. You need a good spark, so having the correct coils is a real no brainer.

Then, you need to calmly, methodically, go through and rule out all of the potential contributory causes mentioned above and confirm / revert to standard condition, which means repairing or replacing parts that are incorrect, suspect or worn.

If it were me, and I wanted a good starting and good running bike (and some will disagree with this), I’d put a Tri Spark ign and two new Tri Spark coils on it straight away.

Then I’d strip the carbs as mentioned above and make a decision on them. Meaning, if they’re good and just need a clean then I’d use them. If the bodies are worn, or if I had to spend a lot of money on new parts for them, I would bin them and fit new Premiers.

I know you’re trying not to waste money, but I assume you don’t want to waste a lot of time either right, and want a nice starting and running bike? At the end of the day, a new Tri Spark and a pair of Premier carbs really does provide an easy starting, well running machine (provided the rest of it is ok of course). If you’re planning on keeping it and enjoying it for many years, it’s really not a big investment to make on a bike and is a quick way of ruling out dozens of potential issues.

By the way… @SteveBorland is based in Denmark and has (or had) a pair of Premier carbs for sale… they’d be much cheaper to ship than new ones from England I imagine.
 
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I think if the plugs are wet you have an ignition problem. If the 12volt coils are connected in series they will be working on half the voltage they were designed for. I would connect them in parallel and see if it then starts. Even if the resistance is then below the recommended for the ignition it would prove a point and mean buying two 6 volt coils would be worthwhile.
 
Ever try cold with an intial shot of ether?
Bad fuel a reality in Canada, so bad that fresh premium from Name-Brand station would not fire in an injected car recently. Ether is a quick check to see if you should drain & refuel. Good carb clean & adjust won't help if fuel is bad.
Best of luck.
I have drained the tank and carbs. For the next try I will use new fuel.
Another point I noted in your original description...a modern rectifier and a zener? Please describe this more....most folks move to a reg/rec....which fully replaced the zener.
The rectifier is this type. The Zener is OEM.
Are you flooding the carbs correctly prior to starting?
I would think so. I tickle both carbs until they barely weep, close the tap, give the bike two kicks with ignition off, then turn ignition on and kick.
 
What carbs do you have?

You say you cleaned out the jets, but the pilot jets are very difficult to clean on mk1 concentrics, some would say impossible without modification (search Old Brits guides for this).

Carbs also wear: slides, bodies, needles, needle jets all wear.

50 plus year old carbs WILL be worn. They could also have none standard jets / needles.

So, stripping the carbs to verify what slides, needles, spray tubes, jets you have, and what condition they are in, is a needed step.

It’s similar with the ign: wires, black boxes, pick up plates, HT leads, plug caps, etc can all suffer age / use related degradation.

So… when it comes to problem solving on a 50 plus year old bike like this, it is often NOT a case of searching for one finite root cause, it is often a case of several contributory causes (each one quite minor alone) combining to cause your symptoms. Therefore, what is required is to ‘confirm / revert to standard’ with the relevant systems / parts.

You DO have one known issue, the coils. IMO you are pissing in the wind trying to work around this. You need a good spark, so having the correct coils is a real no brainer.

Then, you need to calmly, methodically, go through and rule out all of the potential contributory causes mentioned above and confirm / revert to standard condition, which means repairing or replacing parts that are incorrect, suspect or worn.

If it were me, and I wanted a good starting and good running bike (and some will disagree with this), I’d put a Tri Spark ign and two new Tri Spark coils on it straight away.

Then I’d strip the carbs as mentioned above and make a decision on them. Meaning, if they’re good and just need a clean then I’d use them. If the bodies are worn, or if I had to spend a lot of money on new parts for them, I would bin them and fit new Premiers.

I know you’re trying not to waste money, but I assume you don’t want to waste a lot of time either right, and want a nice starting and running bike? At the end of the day, a new Tri Spark and a pair of Premier carbs really does provide an easy starting, well running machine (provided the rest of it is ok of course). If you’re planning on keeping it and enjoying it for many years, it’s really not a big investment to make on a bike and is a quick way of ruling out dozens of potential issues.

By the way… @SteveBorland is based in Denmark and has (or had) a pair of Premier carbs for sale… they’d be much cheaper to ship than new ones from England I imagine.
Thanks for this in-depth post.

I have bought the carbs from @SteveBorland. They are with my father-in-law in Denmark and will be picked up in June. The carbs fitted to the bike right now are resleeved. I am usure about the condition of the needle jets.

I will be buying a pair of 6 V coils later today. It seems good investment and they will be correct also if I decide to change the electronic ignition to a Trispark, Panzon or newer Boyer at a later date.

So the plan is then to fit the new coils, check compression, use new fuel and plugs and see if that improves things.
 
I had some carbs re sleeved and bored out to 33.5mm some years ago. Afterwards they gave me really annoying intermittent problems despite blowing them through with compressed air, carb cleaner, etc.

In the end I boiled them in a large saucepan with some detergent !

The crap that came out was amazing, along with a very unpleasant looking piece of swarf.

The swarf was clearly a result of the work I’d had done on them. They were fine after this.
 
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