I recently rebuilt the carbs on my '79 CB650. Prior to the rebuild of the carbs, this bike was cold-blooded, hard to start, and it helped a lot to give FULL choke, then slowly easing off the choke while it warmed up. It was a bit of baby-sitting, but I've been used to it.
I did make 2 small changes to the jetting during the rebuild since it has a 4-into-2 exhaust, and was never rejetted. I updated to 100 mains, and 38 slow jets. Not a huge jump really.
So the issue is that now the bike won't start with the choke on, but is still VERY cold blooded. It requires a lot of coaxing, and endless cranking.
Another catch is the bike really LOVES to start when I cover the air intake (with a shop rag, or even just my open palm). I thought I had somehow jammed up my choke flaps when re-installing the airbox. I removed the airbox side boots enough to see it was working properly, so ruled that out.
The rag method isn't a long term solution as it causes a vacuum of some kind and gas gets sucked into the airbox and pours of out of the overflow at the bottom of the box.
Anyone got any ideas on what could have made such a drastic change in the choke and starting?