pabster
Well-Known Member
Hey all,
This is no doubt a complete newbie question and I cringe to even ask it, but here goes.
It's been chilly but sunny this winter in Nor Cal, and I'm always a bit apprehensive starting my '74 Charger when it's cold. My car has been starting up fine for a year, but it started having a tougher time of it in the last week, so I put a new battery in- which was definitely needed.
But just so I'm clear, I'm right in thinking that pushing the accelerator to the floor activates the choke, and once it starts, it revs higher until I tap the gas again? That's how it seems to be.
So what's the proper way to go about this? Push the accel to the floor before starting it, or once I turn the key? If it still doesn't start, then what? If it does start, what's a good rule of thumb as far as the time it needs to warm up?
Any tips, tricks of the trade would be helpful. My car and I thank you for helping a Mopar noob out.
This is no doubt a complete newbie question and I cringe to even ask it, but here goes.
It's been chilly but sunny this winter in Nor Cal, and I'm always a bit apprehensive starting my '74 Charger when it's cold. My car has been starting up fine for a year, but it started having a tougher time of it in the last week, so I put a new battery in- which was definitely needed.
But just so I'm clear, I'm right in thinking that pushing the accelerator to the floor activates the choke, and once it starts, it revs higher until I tap the gas again? That's how it seems to be.
So what's the proper way to go about this? Push the accel to the floor before starting it, or once I turn the key? If it still doesn't start, then what? If it does start, what's a good rule of thumb as far as the time it needs to warm up?
Any tips, tricks of the trade would be helpful. My car and I thank you for helping a Mopar noob out.














