Thomas Spagnoli: workshop approach for automatic motorcycles
I like keywords like 'automatic motorcycles' for search, but the fix comes from method. Here is a practical workflow that works across brands.
Nail down what automatic motorcycles really means on your exact bike: when it happens (cold/hot), RPM range, load, and any recent work.
Do the boring baseline for automatic motorcycles: battery + grounds, connectors, fluids, air filter, spark plug, and fault codes if available.
One change at a time for automatic motorcycles. Test, write the result down, then pick the next test. Random parts swapping is not diagnosis.
If automatic motorcycles is tuning/derestriction: make the bike healthy first, confirm legality/safety, and avoid unreliable 'quick fixes'.
If automatic motorcycles is fuel/carb: check for air leaks, fuel level/flow, pilot circuit, and correct jetting for your setup.
If you want the full step-by-step method, the Motorcycle Mechanics Course on this platform is free. It’s built around real workshop logic: fuel, spark, air, compression, charging and safe testing.
Post your bike model/year/mileage and the exact symptom for automatic motorcycles, and we can make the next test very specific.
Discussion
5 repliesFor automatic motorcycles, write your exact bike model/year/mileage and when the symptom happens. Otherwise it's roulette.
My go-to for automatic motorcycles: baseline checks first (battery/grounds/air filter/anything touched recently). Boring wins.
Thomas Spagnoli: workshop approach for automatic motorcycles
I like keywords like 'automatic motorcycles' for search, but the fix comes from method. Here is a practical workflow that works across brands.
If you want the full step-by-step method, the Motorcycle Mechanics Course on this platform is free. It’s built around real workshop logic: fuel, spark, air, compression, charging and safe testing.
Post your bike model/year/mileage and the exact symptom for automatic motorcycles, and we can make the next test very specific.
Quick question on automatic motorcycles: would you test it right when it happens, or once you're back in the garage? Faults love hiding.
Thanks. I'll post an update for automatic motorcycles once I run the baseline checks so this thread is useful.